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Development and Experimental Analysis of Wireless High Accuracy Ultra-Wideband Localization Systems for Indoor Medical Applications

Date Issued
May 1, 2012
Author(s)
Kuhn, Michael Joseph  
Advisor(s)
Mohamed R. Mahfouz
Additional Advisor(s)
Aly E. Fathy
Richard D. Komistek
William R. Hamel
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/21574
Abstract

This dissertation addresses several interesting and relevant problems in the field of wireless technologies applied to medical applications and specifically problems related to ultra-wideband high accuracy localization for use in the operating room. This research is cross disciplinary in nature and fundamentally builds upon microwave engineering, software engineering, systems engineering, and biomedical engineering. A good portion of this work has been published in peer reviewed microwave engineering and biomedical engineering conferences and journals. Wireless technologies in medicine are discussed with focus on ultra-wideband positioning in orthopedic surgical navigation. Characterization of the operating room as a medium for ultra-wideband signal transmission helps define system design requirements.


A discussion of the first generation positioning system provides a context for understanding the overall system architecture of the second generation ultra-wideband positioning system outlined in this dissertation. A system-level simulation framework provides a method for rapid prototyping of ultra-wideband positioning systems which takes into account all facets of the system (analog, digital, channel, experimental setup). This provides a robust framework for optimizing overall system design in realistic propagation environments.

A practical approach is taken to outline the development of the second generation ultra-wideband positioning system which includes an integrated tag design and real-time dynamic tracking of multiple tags. The tag and receiver designs are outlined as well as receiver-side digital signal processing, system-level design support for multi-tag tracking, and potential error sources observed in dynamic experiments including phase center error, clock jitter and drift, and geometric position dilution of precision.

An experimental analysis of the multi-tag positioning system provides insight into overall system performance including the main sources of error. A five base station experiment shows the potential of redundant base stations in improving overall dynamic accuracy. Finally, the system performance in low signal-to-noise ratio and non-line-of-sight environments is analyzed by focusing on receiver-side digitally-implemented ranging algorithms including leading-edge detection and peak detection.

These technologies are aimed at use in next-generation medical systems with many applications including surgical navigation, wireless telemetry, medical asset tracking, and in vivo wireless sensors.

Subjects

biomedical

wireless

ultra wideband

3-D tracking

Disciplines
Biomechanics and Biotransport
Biomedical
Biomedical Devices and Instrumentation
Electromagnetics and Photonics
Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing
Signal Processing
Systems and Integrative Engineering
Systems Engineering
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Major
Biomedical Engineering
Embargo Date
December 1, 2011
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

Michael_Kuhn_PhD_Dissertation_Final.pdf

Size

15.12 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

39a0956af98eadbbb83ca0adcf0da7d0

Thumbnail Image
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Michael_Kuhn_PhD_Dissertation_v20_After_Defense.docx

Size

44.93 MB

Format

Microsoft Word XML

Checksum (MD5)

cd08f6ada954cfa9656a3ed4728e3bff

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