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2022 International Conference on Advancement in Electrical and Electronic Engineering, ICAEEE 2022 ; 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2018775

ABSTRACT

In this paper, a 5G on-body patch has been designed for detecting COVID-19 affected lung. A new material Single Wall Carbon Nanotube (SWCNT) is used to design the patch of the antenna. Copper is used to designing the ground and FR-4 (lossy) is used in the substrate. The antenna has a total thickness of 5.5 mm where the patch thickness is 0.5 mm, the substrate thickness is 4.5 mm, and the ground thickness is 0.5 mm. The total volume (length x width x thickness) of this antenna is 80 mm x 80 mm x 5.5 mm (35200 mm3). For detecting COVID-19, designed two human lung phantom body models such as a COVID-19 affected lung model and a non-affected normal lung model. The patch antenna and all the models were designed in CST Microwave Studio. All the dielectric properties and other valuable parameters of the antenna materials and lung phantom models were collected and used for designing the antenna and phantom lung models. The antenna's return loss (S1,1) is -27.498894 dB, gain is 3.007 dB, VSWR is 1.0880641, directivity is 6.007 dB, resonant frequency is 6.296 GHz, SAR 1.19 W/Kg, bandwidth is 1.8174 GHz and the efficiency is 61% in free space. In this pandemic situation, this antenna can be given a new step for detecting COVID-19 affected lung. © 2022 IEEE.

2.
Appl Mater Today ; 27: 101473, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1777973

ABSTRACT

The pandemic of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has made biotextiles, including face masks and protective clothing, quite familiar in our daily lives. Biotextiles are one broad category of textile products that are beyond our imagination. Currently, biotextiles have been routinely utilized in various biomedical fields, like daily protection, wound healing, tissue regeneration, drug delivery, and sensing, to improve the health and medical conditions of individuals. However, these biotextiles are commonly manufactured with fibers with diameters on the micrometer scale (> 10 µm). Recently, nanofibrous materials have aroused extensive attention in the fields of fiber science and textile engineering because the fibers with nanoscale diameters exhibited obviously superior performances, such as size and surface/interface effects as well as optical, electrical, mechanical, and biological properties, compared to microfibers. A combination of innovative electrospinning techniques and traditional textile-forming strategies opens a new window for the generation of nanofibrous biotextiles to renew and update traditional microfibrous biotextiles. In the last two decades, the conventional electrospinning device has been widely modified to generate nanofiber yarns (NYs) with the fiber diameters less than 1000 nm. The electrospun NYs can be further employed as the primary processing unit for manufacturing a new generation of nano-textiles using various textile-forming strategies. In this review, starting from the basic information of conventional electrospinning techniques, we summarize the innovative electrospinning strategies for NY fabrication and critically discuss their advantages and limitations. This review further covers the progress in the construction of electrospun NY-based nanotextiles and their recent applications in biomedical fields, mainly including surgical sutures, various scaffolds and implants for tissue engineering, smart wearable bioelectronics, and their current and potential applications in the COVID-19 pandemic. At the end, this review highlights and identifies the future needs and opportunities of electrospun NYs and NY-based nanotextiles for clinical use.

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