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by Keyword: Metamaterials
Alonso-Valdesueiro, Javier, Fernandez, Luis, Gutierrez-Galvez, Agustin, Marco, Santiago, (2025). CSRR Chemical Sensing in Uncontrolled Environments by PLS Regression IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL 25, 37664-37673
Complementary split ring resonators (CSRRs) have been extensively studied as planar sensors in the last two decades. However, their practical use remains limited to controlled environments and classification problems. Their performance relies on high-end vector network analyzers (VNAs), highly repeatable laboratory conditions, and special sample holders or microfluidic circuits hinders its regular use in chemistry laboratories as an analytical tool. Temperature drifts and humidity variations during measuring, uncertainties in the electromagnetic properties of the sample containers, and careless sample handling introduce significant uncertainties in measurements, leading to unreliable results. Therefore, the prediction of target compounds concentration in samples has been out of the research focus up to now. Machine learning (ML) algorithms can help to mitigate these uncertainties and open the applicability of CSRR sensors to quantification problems, where it is necessary to determine the amount of a substance in a liquid (or solid) sample. This work presents a novel approach that tackles this issue, combining a CSRR sensor with well-stabilized ML algorithms that enhance its quantification performance. For illustration purposes, a low-cost, benchtop CSRR-based system is proposed to predict ethanol concentration in water solutions. Ethanol samples from 10% to 96% concentration were prepared in commercial vials, generating 450 randomized measurements. Principal component analysis (PCA) was employed for data exploration, while a partial least squares (PLS) regression model, tuned with leave-one-group-out cross validation (LOGO-CV), was trained for ethanol concentration prediction. No feature extraction technique or noise reduction strategy was applied. Although this straightforward workflow is well known in the chemical sensing field, it has not been applied to data acquired with CSRR sensors. The trained model achieved a root mean square error in prediction (RMSEP) of 3.7% . Compared with 23.4% RMSEP when using univariate calibration at optimized frequencies, it presents a prediction performance reduced by a factor of 6. No evidence of underfitting or overfitting was observed during the test of the trained model. The low RMSEP achieved by the presented setup demonstrates the potential of CSRR-based sensors when combined with ML techniques for concentration prediction working in realistic, uncontrolled conditions. This pushes forward the applicability of CSRR sensors in the chemical analysis field, which might lead to benchtop, low-cost, and reliable analysis devices for many laboratories.
JTD Keywords: Chemical analysis, Chemical sensors, Complementary, Complementary split ring resonator (csrr) sensors, Concentration prediction, Design, Electronic mail, Ethanol, Feature extraction, Filters, Machine learning (ml), Metamaterials, Principal component analysis, Resonators, Rf sensors, Sensor phenomena and characterization, Sensors, Split-ring resonators, Temperature measurement, Transmission, Transmission line measurements, Uncertainty, Variable selection
Riccobelli, D., Noselli, G., Arroyo, M., DeSimone, A., (2020). Mechanics of axisymmetric sheets of interlocking and slidable rods Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 141, 103969
In this work, we study the mechanics of metamaterial sheets inspired by the pellicle of Euglenids. They are composed of interlocking elastic rods which can freely slide along their edges. We characterize the kinematics and the mechanics of these structures using the special Cosserat theory of rods and by assuming axisymmetric deformations of the tubular assembly. Through an asymptotic expansion, we investigate both structures that comprise a discrete number of rods and the limit case of a sheet composed by infinitely many rods. We apply our theoretical framework to investigate the stability of these structures in the presence of an axial load. Through a linear analysis, we compute the critical buckling force for both the discrete and the continuous case. For the latter, we also perform a numerical post-buckling analysis, studying the non-linear evolution of the bifurcation through finite elements simulations.
JTD Keywords: Biomimetic structures, Elastic structures, Helical rods, Mechanical instabilities, Metamaterials, Post-buckling analysis
