Experimental Characterization of Biological Tissue Dielectric Properties through THz Time-Domain Spectroscopy

arXiv:2603.09807v19.4h-index: 12
Predicted impact top 46% in OPTICS · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
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This provides an extended-frequency dataset for realistic channel modeling in THz intra-body nanosensor networks, addressing a domain-specific need.

The study characterized the dielectric properties of pork skin tissue using THz time-domain spectroscopy from 0.1-11 THz, finding strong absorption at low frequencies due to water and frequency-dependent dispersion with narrowband transmission at higher frequencies.

Terahertz (THz) radiation provides a non-ionizing, highly sensitive probe of the dielectric properties of biological tissues. In this study, we present a comprehensive experimental characterization of dielectric properties using pork skin tissue, a widely used surrogate for human tissue, as a biological sample. Measurements are conducted employing THz time-domain spectroscopy in the 0.1-11 THz frequency range with photoconductive antennas for both signal generation and detection. Frequency-dependent refractive indices, absorption, and complex permittivity are extracted from transmitted time-domain signals. Our results confirm strong absorption and low transmittance at low THz frequencies due to water content, while highlighting frequency-dependent dispersion and narrowband transmission features at higher frequencies. This work provides one of the first extended-frequency datasets of biological tissue dielectric properties, supporting realistic channel modeling for the design and development of intra-body nanosensor networks in the THz band.

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