I have this problem in a curl sending json that required some fields to be integer and other fields string, but some of the values of the string fields were in fact numbers so JSON_NUMERIC_CHECK didn't worked because it converted everything that looked as a number to number.
The solution I've found was to add characters representing future double quotes, in my case I've used @ as I knew it was impossible to have this character in my data, to the fields representing string values
$analysis = array(
'SampleAnalysisId' => $record[3],
'DisplayValue' => '@'.$record[4].'@',
'MeasurementUnit' => '@'.$record[5].'@',
'SampleAnalysisConclusionId' => $record[6],
'Uncertaint' => '@'.$record[7].'@',
'K' => '',
'QuantificationLimit' => '@'.$record[8].'@',
'DetectionLimit' => '@'.$record[9].'@',
'Veff' => ''
);
Then after encoding I replaced the double quotes for empty and then replaced the '@' for double quotes.
$str = json_encode($analysis,JSON_UNESCAPED_UNICODE | JSON_UNESCAPED_SLASHES );
$str = str_replace('@','"',str_replace('",',',',str_replace(':"',':',$str)));
Resulting in a formatted json according to my need
[{"SampleAnalysisId":10479,"DisplayValue":"6,3","MeasurementUnit":"mg/L","SampleAnalysisConclusionId":1,"Uncertaint":"0,194463","K":,"QuantificationLimit":"1","DetectionLimit":"0,30","Veff":"}]