Broadband Dielectric Spectroscopy on Human Blood
M. Wolf, R. Gulich, P. Lunkenheimer, A. Loidl

TL;DR
This study provides comprehensive broadband dielectric spectra of human blood across 1 Hz to 40 GHz, revealing detailed insights into its dynamic processes and intrinsic properties relevant for medical applications.
Contribution
It offers the first high-precision dielectric data of human blood over a broad frequency range, clarifies the absence of low-frequency alpha-relaxation, and characterizes multiple relaxation processes.
Findings
No evidence of low-frequency alpha-relaxation.
Identification of Maxwell-Wagner beta-relaxation from cell membrane polarization.
Observation of water reorientational gamma-relaxation in the microwave region.
Abstract
Dielectric spectra of human blood reveal a rich variety of dynamic processes. Achieving a better characterization and understanding of these processes not only is of academic interest but also of high relevance for medical applications as, e.g., the determination of absorption rates of electromagnetic radiation by the human body. The dielectric properties of human blood are studied using broadband dielectric spectroscopy, systematically investigating the dependence on temperature and hematocrit value. By covering a frequency range from 1 Hz to 40 GHz, information on all the typical dispersion regions of biological matter is obtained. We find no evidence for a low-frequency relaxation (alpha-relaxation) caused, e.g., by counterion diffusion effects as reported for some types of biological matter. The analysis of a strong Maxwell-Wagner relaxation arising from the polarization of the cell…
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