Development and experimental validation of a non-invasive NIR spectroscopic sensor system for blood glucose monitoring
Więcej
Ukryj
1
Student PhD
Department of Electronics, Telecommunications and Space Technologies
Satbayevа University
Senior Lecturer
Higher School of Telecommunications
Turan University
a.zilgarayeva@turan-edu.kz
2
Department of Computer Engineering
Turan University
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Lublin University of Technology (Politechnika Lubelska)
saule.kaus@gmail.com
3
PhD
Research Division
Institute of Mechanics and Mechanical Engineering named after Academician
U.A. Dzholdasbekov
Department of Radio Engineering, Electronics and Space Technologies
Kazakh National Research Technical University named after K. I. Satpayeva
n.smailov@satbayev.university
4
Student PhD
Department of Electronics, Telecommunications and Space Technologies
Satbayevа University
Senior Lecturer
Higher School of Telecommunications
Turan University
+77016900386
5
Department of Radio Engineering and Telecommunications
Mukhametzhan Tynyshbayev ALT University
mgulz1@yandex.ru
6
Candidate of Technical Sciences
Research professor, Higher School of Telecommunications,
Turan University,
b.kulambayev@turan-edu.kz
7
Senior Lecturer
Higher School of Telecommunications
Turan University
s.avelbekova@turan-edu.kz
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Autor do korespondencji
Saule Luganskaya
Department of Computer Engineering
Turan University
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Lublin University of Technology (Politechnika Lubelska)
saule.kaus@gmail.com
SŁOWA KLUCZOWE
DZIEDZINY
STRESZCZENIE
Abstract
Non-invasive blood glucose monitoring remains a major challenge in biomedical sensing due to strong light scattering in biological tissues, physiological variability, and limited signal stability of existing optical methods. Near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy has attracted significant interest as a promising approach for continuous and painless glucose monitoring; however, many reported systems remain confined to laboratory conditions and lack sufficient experimental validation.
In this study, a compact multispectral non-invasive sensor system based on NIR spectroscopy is developed and experimentally validated. A mathematical model of optical absorption in biological tissues, based on the Beer–Lambert law and implemented in the MATLAB/Simulink environment, was used to identify wavelength regions exhibiting favorable sensitivity–stability trade-offs. Based on simulation results, four operating wavelengths (940, 1050, 1200, and 1350 nm) were selected for sensor implementation.
The proposed system integrates near-infrared light-emitting diodes, a photodiode with low-noise amplification, an analog-to-digital conversion stage, and a microcontroller-based data acquisition unit. Experimental validation was performed under both in vitro measurements using aqueous glucose solutions and in vivo measurements conducted on the human earlobe in a transmission configuration.
The results demonstrate a strong correlation between optical signal attenuation and glucose concentration (r > 0.95), with a relative measurement deviation not exceeding 5% under controlled experimental conditions. The highest sensitivity was observed at 940 nm, while longer wavelengths (1200–1350 nm) provided enhanced signal stability. Digital signal processing enabled noise reduction of approximately 25–30%, improving measurement reproducibility.
Overall, the results confirm the feasibility of the proposed multispectral NIR-based sensor as a proof-of-concept platform for non-invasive glucose monitoring and provide a basis for further optimization and extended experimental and preclinical validation studies.