“…[18][19][20][21] A common example of this is RF sensors, wherein conductive traces are patterned so as to resonate when excited by RF waves. [22][23][24][25] Such an approach has been adapted to build sensors and biosensors sensitive to a variety of chemophysical signals, such as pressure, [26,27] temperature, [28][29][30] glucose, [31,32] salinity, [33,34] nutrients, [35,36] and more. Despite the emerging versatility of this approach, RF sensor readout is still highly limited, as typically only a single sensor is assessed at a time, and the technique is not stable to mechanical noise because readout coil and sensor alignment are typically not fixed.…”