Submillimeter-Wave Permittivity Measurements of Bound Water in Collagen Hydrogels via Frequency Domain Spectroscopy
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-1-2021
Identifier/URL
43000020 (Pure)
Abstract
This article presents measurements of the permittivity of gelatin hydrogels between 220 and 330 GHz. Hydrated gelatin was treated as a binary mixture of free water and a compound consisting of water bound to collagen. Submillimeter-wave reflectometry was used to estimate the hydrated gelatin permittivity, hydrated gelatin density, and free-water volume fraction in phantoms composed of 62, 67, 72, and 77% water by weight. A hydrated dry/wet density ratio of 0.335 was validated with optical-coherence tomography. A constant nonfreezing bound-water mass of 0.6 g/g was observed and confirmed with differential-scanning calorimetry. Good agreement between results from different modalities supports the dielectric spectroscopy methods and data analysis. Depending on the hydrodynamics at the sample/air interface, measurements indicate a bound-water compound permittivity of 3.77-j2.52 to 3.95-j2.49-contrasting the pure-water average permittivity of 5.16-j5.63. The loss related to bound water was much higher than anticipated and characterization will help reduce uncertainty in measurements of gelatin hydrogel-based tissue phantoms; particularly corneal phantoms where adjacent free water creates complex hydration gradients. This is the first known, submillimeter-wave, frequency domain measurement of complex permittivity of the bound-water component in solid, proteinaceous matter.
Repository Citation
Tamminen, A.,
Baggio, M.,
Nefedova, I.,
Sun, Q.,
Anttila, J.,
Ala-Laurinaho, J.,
Brown, E. R.,
Wallace, V. P.,
Pickwell-Macpherson, E.,
Maloney, T.,
Salkola, M.,
Deng, S. X.,
& Taylor, Z. D.
(2021). Submillimeter-Wave Permittivity Measurements of Bound Water in Collagen Hydrogels via Frequency Domain Spectroscopy. IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology, 11 (5), 538-547.
https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/physics/1174
DOI
10.1109/TTHZ.2021.3088273
