Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems

On-body communication channels are of increasing interest for a number of applications, such as medical-sensor networks, emergency-service workers, and personal communications. This paper describes investigations into channel characterization and antenna performance at 2.45 GHz. It is shown that sig...

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Main Authors: Kamarudin, Muhammad Ramlee, Hall, Peter S., yang, Hao, Nechayev, Yuriv I., Alomainy, Akram, Constantinou, Costas C., Parini, Clive, Salim, Tareq Z., David T., M. Hee, Bubrovka, Rostyslav, Owadally, Abdus S., Wei, Song, Serra, Andrea, Nepa, Paolo, Gallo, Michele, Bozzetti, Michele
Format: Article
Published: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 2007
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/8613/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/MAP.2007.4293935
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spelling my.utm.86132009-05-06T04:31:10Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/8613/ Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems Kamarudin, Muhammad Ramlee Hall, Peter S. yang, Hao Nechayev, Yuriv I. Alomainy, Akram Constantinou, Costas C. Parini, Clive Salim, Tareq Z. David T., M. Hee Bubrovka, Rostyslav Owadally, Abdus S. Wei, Song Serra, Andrea Nepa, Paolo Gallo, Michele Bozzetti, Michele TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering On-body communication channels are of increasing interest for a number of applications, such as medical-sensor networks, emergency-service workers, and personal communications. This paper describes investigations into channel characterization and antenna performance at 2.45 GHz. It is shown that significant channel fading occurs during normal activity, due primarily to the dynamic nature of the human body, but also due to multipath around the body and from scattering by the environment. This fading can be mitigated by the use of antenna diversity, and gains of up to 10 dB are obtained. Separation of the antenna's performance from the channel characteristics is difficult, but results show that for many channels, an antenna polarized normal to the body's surface gives the best path gain. Simulation and modeling present many challenges, particularly in terms of the problem's scale, and the need for accurate modeling of the body and its movement. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 2007 Article PeerReviewed Kamarudin, Muhammad Ramlee and Hall, Peter S. and yang, Hao and Nechayev, Yuriv I. and Alomainy, Akram and Constantinou, Costas C. and Parini, Clive and Salim, Tareq Z. and David T., M. Hee and Bubrovka, Rostyslav and Owadally, Abdus S. and Wei, Song and Serra, Andrea and Nepa, Paolo and Gallo, Michele and Bozzetti, Michele (2007) Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems. IEEE Antennas And Propagation magazine, 49 (3). pp. 41-58. ISSN 1045-9243 http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/MAP.2007.4293935 10.1109/MAP.2007.4293935
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering
spellingShingle TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering
Kamarudin, Muhammad Ramlee
Hall, Peter S.
yang, Hao
Nechayev, Yuriv I.
Alomainy, Akram
Constantinou, Costas C.
Parini, Clive
Salim, Tareq Z.
David T., M. Hee
Bubrovka, Rostyslav
Owadally, Abdus S.
Wei, Song
Serra, Andrea
Nepa, Paolo
Gallo, Michele
Bozzetti, Michele
Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems
description On-body communication channels are of increasing interest for a number of applications, such as medical-sensor networks, emergency-service workers, and personal communications. This paper describes investigations into channel characterization and antenna performance at 2.45 GHz. It is shown that significant channel fading occurs during normal activity, due primarily to the dynamic nature of the human body, but also due to multipath around the body and from scattering by the environment. This fading can be mitigated by the use of antenna diversity, and gains of up to 10 dB are obtained. Separation of the antenna's performance from the channel characteristics is difficult, but results show that for many channels, an antenna polarized normal to the body's surface gives the best path gain. Simulation and modeling present many challenges, particularly in terms of the problem's scale, and the need for accurate modeling of the body and its movement.
format Article
author Kamarudin, Muhammad Ramlee
Hall, Peter S.
yang, Hao
Nechayev, Yuriv I.
Alomainy, Akram
Constantinou, Costas C.
Parini, Clive
Salim, Tareq Z.
David T., M. Hee
Bubrovka, Rostyslav
Owadally, Abdus S.
Wei, Song
Serra, Andrea
Nepa, Paolo
Gallo, Michele
Bozzetti, Michele
author_facet Kamarudin, Muhammad Ramlee
Hall, Peter S.
yang, Hao
Nechayev, Yuriv I.
Alomainy, Akram
Constantinou, Costas C.
Parini, Clive
Salim, Tareq Z.
David T., M. Hee
Bubrovka, Rostyslav
Owadally, Abdus S.
Wei, Song
Serra, Andrea
Nepa, Paolo
Gallo, Michele
Bozzetti, Michele
author_sort Kamarudin, Muhammad Ramlee
title Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems
title_short Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems
title_full Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems
title_fullStr Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems
title_full_unstemmed Antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems
title_sort antennas and propagation for on-body communication systems
publisher Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
publishDate 2007
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/8613/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/MAP.2007.4293935
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