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Dive into the research topics where M.A. Carvajal is active.

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Featured researches published by M.A. Carvajal.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2009

Phosphorescent sensing of carbon dioxide based on secondary inner-filter quenching

I.M. Pérez de Vargas-Sansalvador; M.A. Carvajal; O.M. Roldán-Muñoz; J. Banqueri; M.D. Fernández-Ramos; L.F. Capitán-Vallvey

A study of different strategies to prepare phosphorescence-based sensors for gaseous CO(2) determination has been performed. It includes the characterization of different configurations tested, a discussion of the results obtained and possibilities for the future. The optical sensor for gaseous CO(2) is based on changes in the phosphorescence intensity of the platinum octaethylporphyrin (PtOEP) complex trapped both on oxygen-insensitive poly(vinylidene chloride-co-vinyl chloride) (PVCD) membranes and PVCD microparticles, due to the displacement of the alpha-naphtholphthalein acid-base equilibrium with CO(2) concentration. A secondary inner-filter mechanism was tested for the sensor and a full range linearized calibration was obtained by plotting (I(100)-I(0))/(I-I(0)) versus the inverse of the CO(2) concentration, where I(0) and I(100) are the detected luminescence intensities from a membrane exposed to 100% nitrogen and 100% CO(2), respectively, and I at a defined CO(2) concentration. The different configurations tested included the use of membranes containing luminophore and pH-sensitive dye placed on two opposite sides of a transparent support to prevent the observed degradation of the PtOEP complex in the presence of the tetraoctylammonium hydroxide (TOAOH) phase transfer agent, which produced better results regarding stability and sensitivity. The CO(2) gas sensor based on PtOEP homogeneous membranes presented better properties in terms of response time and sensitivity than that based on PtOEP microparticles. With a detection limit of 0.02%, the response time (10-90% maximum signal) is 9 s and the recovery time (90-10%) is 115 s. The lifetime of the membranes for CO(2) sensing preserved in a 94% RH atmosphere and dark conditions is longer than at least 4 months.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2011

Thermal drift reduction with multiple bias current for MOSFET dosimeters

M.A. Carvajal; A. Martínez-Olmos; Diego P. Morales; J. A. López-Villanueva; Antonio M. Lallena; Alberto J. Palma

New thermal compensation methods suitable for p-channel MOSFET (pMOS) dosimeters with the usual dose readout procedure based on a constant drain current are presented. Measuring the source-drain voltage shifts for two or three different drain currents and knowing the value of the zero-temperature coefficient drain current, I(ZTC), the thermal drift of source-drain or threshold voltages can be significantly reduced. Analytical expressions for the thermal compensation have been theoretically deduced on the basis of a linear dependence on temperature of the parameters involved. The proposed thermal modelling has been experimentally proven. These methods have been applied to a group of ten commercial pMOS transistors (3N163). The thermal coefficients of the source-drain voltage and the threshold voltage were reduced from -3.0 mV  °C(-1), in the worst case, down to -70 µV  °C(-1). This means a thermal drift of -2.4 mGy  °C(-1) for the dosimeter. When analysing the thermal drifts of all the studied transistors, in the temperature range from 19 to 36 °C, uncertainty was obtained in the threshold voltage due to a thermal drift of ±9 mGy (2 SD), a commonly acceptable value in most radiotherapy treatments. The procedures described herein provide thermal drift reduction comparable to that of other technological or numerical strategies, but can be used in a very simple and low-cost dosimetry sensor.


Sensors | 2015

Passive UHF RFID Tag with Multiple Sensing Capabilities

José Fernández-Salmerón; Almudena Rivadeneyra; Fernando Martínez-Martí; L.F. Capitán-Vallvey; Alberto J. Palma; M.A. Carvajal

This work presents the design, fabrication, and characterization of a printed radio frequency identification tag in the ultra-high frequency band with multiple sensing capabilities. This passive tag is directly screen printed on a cardboard box with the aim of monitoring the packaging conditions during the different stages of the supply chain. This tag includes a commercial force sensor and a printed opening detector. Hence, the force applied to the package can be measured as well as the opening of the box can be detected. The architecture presented is a passive single-chip RFID tag. An electronic switch has been implemented to be able to measure both sensor magnitudes in the same access without including a microcontroller or battery. Moreover, the chip used here integrates a temperature sensor and, therefore, this tag provides three different parameters in every reading.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

Portable light-emitting diode-based photometer with one-shot optochemical sensors for measurement in the field

Alberto J. Palma; J. M. Ortigosa; Alejandro Lapresta-Fernández; M.D. Fernández-Ramos; M.A. Carvajal; L.F. Capitán-Vallvey

This report describes the electronics of a portable, low-cost, light-emitting diode (LED)-based photometer dedicated to one-shot optochemical sensors. Optical detection is made through a monolithic photodiode with an on-chip single-supply transimpedance amplifier that reduces some drawbacks such as leakage currents, interferences, and parasitic capacitances. The main instrument characteristics are its high light source stability and thermal correction. The former is obtained by means of the optical feedback from the LED polarization circuit, implementing a pseudo-two light beam scheme from a unique light source with a built-in beam splitter. The feedback loop has also been used to adjust the LED power in several ranges. Moreover, the low-thermal coefficient achieved (-90 ppm/degrees C) is compensated by thermal monitoring and calibration function compensation in the digital processing. The hand-held instrument directly gives the absorbance ratio used as the analytical parameter and the analyte concentration after programming the calibration function in the microcontroller. The application of this photometer for the determination of potassium and nitrate, using one-shot sensors with ionophore-based chemistries is also demonstrated, with a simple analytical methodology that shortens the analysis time, eliminating some calibrating solutions (HCl, NaOH, and buffer). Therefore, this compact instrument is suitable for real-time analyte determination and operation in the field.


Medical Engineering & Physics | 2013

An application of reconfigurable technologies for non-invasive fetal heart rate extraction

Diego P. Morales; Antonio G. García; Encarnación Castillo; M.A. Carvajal; L. Parrilla; Alberto J. Palma

This paper illustrates the use of a reconfigurable system for fetal electrocardiogram (FECG) estimation from mothers abdomen ECG measurements. The system is based on two different reconfigurable devices. Initially, a field-programmable analog array (FPAA) device implements the analog reconfigurable preprocessing for ECG signal acquisition. The signal processing chain continues onto a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) device, which contains all the communication and interfacing protocols along with specific digital signal processing blocks required for fundamental period extraction from FECG waveforms. The synergy between these devices provides the system the ability to change any necessary parameter during the acquisition process for enhancing the result. The use of a FPGA allows implementing different algorithms for FECG signal extraction, such as adaptive signal filtering. Preliminary works employ commercially available development platforms for test experiments, which suffice for the processing of real FECG signals from biomedical databases, as the presented results illustrate.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

CCSD(T) study of dimethyl-ether infrared and Raman spectra

M. Villa; María Luisa Senent; R. Dominguez-Gomez; O. Alvarez-Bajo; M.A. Carvajal

CCSD(T) state-of-the-art ab initio calculations are used to determine a vibrationally corrected three-dimensional potential energy surface of dimethyl-ether depending on the two methyl torsions and the COC bending angle. The surface is employed to obtain variationally the lowest vibrational energies that can be populated at very low temperatures. The interactions between the bending and the torsional coordinates are responsible for the displacements of the torsional overtone bands and several combination bands. The effect of these interactions on the potential parameters is analyzed. Second order perturbation theory is used as a help for the understanding of many spectroscopic parameters and to obtain anharmonic fundamentals for the 3N - 9 neglected modes as well as the rotational parameters. To evaluate the surface accuracy and to verify previous assignments, the calculated vibrational levels are compared with experimental data corresponding to the most abundant isotopologue. The surface has been empirically adjusted for understanding the origin of small divergences between ab initio calculations and experimental data. Our calculations confirm previous assignments and show the importance of including the COC bending degree of freedom for computing with a higher accuracy the excited torsional term values through the Fermi interaction. Besides, this work shows a possible lack of accuracy of some available experimental transition frequencies and proposes a new assignment for a transition line. As an example, the transition 100 → 120 has been computed at 445.93 cm(-1), which is consistent with the observed transition frequency in the Raman spectrum at 450.5 cm(-1).


Australasian Physical & Engineering Sciences in Medicine | 2014

Embedded sensor insole for wireless measurement of gait parameters

Fernando Martínez-Martí; M.S. Martínez-García; Santiago G. García-Díaz; Javier García-Jiménez; Alberto J. Palma; M.A. Carvajal

This work presents the development of a portable, wireless activity monitoring system for the estimation of biomechanical gait parameters. The system uses a pair of instrumented insoles able to measure pressure from different points of the foot including four commercial piezoresistive pressure sensors and a three-axis accelerometer, all together integrated in the insole to determine foot forces during stance and swing phases. The system includes two kinds of analysis data, one on line with a RF communications to a computer, and another off line reading the data from SD memory card. Our system has been validated and tested in different trials, extracting several features during walking for ten participants by means of the combined information from the two kinds of sensors. With the combined data from the complete set of sensors, we can obtain highly valuable information on foot movement during the non-contact period, such as supination or pronation characteristics or anomalous movement during flight time. From our preliminary results, the variation of the lateral acceleration of the foot seems to be correlated with the amount of supination.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2009

Monte Carlo simulation using the PENELOPE code with an ant colony algorithm to study MOSFET detectors

M.A. Carvajal; S. Garcia-Pareja; D. Guirado; M. Vilches; M. Anguiano; Alberto J. Palma; Antonio M. Lallena

In this work we have developed a simulation tool, based on the PENELOPE code, to study the response of MOSFET devices to irradiation with high-energy photons. The energy deposited in the extremely thin silicon dioxide layer has been calculated. To reduce the statistical uncertainties, an ant colony algorithm has been implemented to drive the application of splitting and Russian roulette as variance reduction techniques. In this way, the uncertainty has been reduced by a factor of approximately 5, while the efficiency is increased by a factor of above 20. As an application, we have studied the dependence of the response of the pMOS transistor 3N163, used as a dosimeter, with the incidence angle of the radiation for three common photons sources used in radiotherapy: a (60)Co Theratron-780 and the 6 and 18 MV beams produced by a Mevatron KDS LINAC. Experimental and simulated results have been obtained for gantry angles of 0 degrees, 15 degrees, 30 degrees, 45 degrees, 60 degrees and 75 degrees. The agreement obtained has permitted validation of the simulation tool. We have studied how to reduce the angular dependence of the MOSFET response by using an additional encapsulation made of brass in the case of the two LINAC qualities considered.


Sensors | 2016

Passive UHF RFID Tag for Multispectral Assessment

Pablo Escobedo; M.A. Carvajal; L.F. Capitán-Vallvey; José Fernández-Salmerón; A. Martínez-Olmos; Alberto J. Palma

This work presents the design, fabrication, and characterization of a passive printed radiofrequency identification tag in the ultra-high-frequency band with multiple optical sensing capabilities. This tag includes five photodiodes to cover a wide spectral range from near-infrared to visible and ultraviolet spectral regions. The tag antenna and circuit connections have been screen-printed on a flexible polymeric substrate. An ultra-low-power microcontroller-based switch has been included to measure the five magnitudes issuing from the optical sensors, providing a spectral fingerprint of the incident electromagnetic radiation from ultraviolet to infrared, without requiring energy from a battery. The normalization procedure has been designed applying illuminants, and the entire system was tested by measuring cards from a colour chart and sensing fruit ripening.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

CCSD(T) study of CD3-O-CD3 and CH3-O-CD3 far-infrared spectra.

María Luisa Senent; R. Dominguez-Gomez; M.A. Carvajal; M. Villa

From a vibrationally corrected 3D potential energy surface determined with highly correlated ab initio calculations (CCSD(T)), the lowest vibrational energies of two dimethyl-ether isotopologues, (12)CH(3)-(16)O-(12)CD(3) (DME-d(3)) and (12)CD(3)-(16)O-(12)CD(3) (DME-d(6)), are computed variationally. The levels that can be populated at very low temperatures correspond to the COC-bending and the two methyl torsional modes. Molecular symmetry groups are used for the classification of levels and torsional splittings. DME-d(6) belongs to the G(36) group, as the most abundant isotopologue (12)CH(3)-(16)O-(12)CH(3) (DME-h(6)), while DME-d(3) is a G(18) species. Previous assignments of experimental Raman and far-infrared spectra are discussed from an effective Hamiltonian obtained after refining the ab initio parameters. Because a good agreement between calculated and experimental transition frequencies is reached, new assignments are proposed for various combination bands corresponding to the two deuterated isotopologues and for the 020 → 030 transition of DME-d(6). Vibrationally corrected potential energy barriers, structural parameters, and anharmonic spectroscopic parameters are provided. For the 3N - 9 neglected vibrational modes, harmonic and anharmonic fundamental frequencies are obtained using second-order perturbation theory by means of CCSD and MP2 force fields. Fermi resonances between the COC-bending and the torsional modes modify DME-d(3) intensities and the band positions of the torsional overtones.

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María Luisa Senent

Spanish National Research Council

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