DocumentCode
1060738
Title
An Antennas and Propagation Approach to Improving Physical Layer Performance in Wireless Body Area Networks
Author
Conway, Gareth A. ; Cotton, Simon L. ; Scanlon, William G.
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electron., Queen´´s Univ., Belfast
Volume
27
Issue
1
fYear
2009
fDate
1/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
27
Lastpage
36
Abstract
A combined antennas and propagation study has been undertaken with a view to directly improving link conditions for wireless body area networks. Using tissue-equivalent numerical and experimental phantoms representative of muscle tissue at 2.45 GHz, we show that the node to node |S21| path gain performance of a new wearable integrated antenna (WIA) is up to 9 dB better than a conventional compact Printed-F antenna, both of which are suitable for integration with wireless node circuitry. Overall, the WIA performed extremely well with a measured radiation efficiency of 38% and an impedance bandwidth of 24%. Further benefits were also obtained using spatial diversity, with the WIA providing up to 7.7 dB of diversity gain for maximal ratio combining. The results also show that correlation was lower for a multipath environment leading to higher diversity gain. Furthermore, a diversity implementation with the new antenna gave up to 18 dB better performance in terms of mean power level and there was a significant improvement in level crossing rates and average fade durations when moving from a single-branch to a two-branch diversity system.
Keywords
microstrip antennas; multifrequency antennas; multipath channels; muscle; combined antennas; compact printed-F antenna; level crossing rates; multipath environment; muscle tissue; physical layer performance; propagation approach; spatial diversity; tissue-equivalent numerical phantoms; wearable integrated antenna; wireless body area networks; wireless node circuitry; Antennas and propagation; Body sensor networks; Circuits; Diversity methods; Diversity reception; Imaging phantoms; Muscles; Performance evaluation; Performance gain; Physical layer; Body area network; wearable antennas; channel characterization; diversity; on-body channels;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0733-8716
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSAC.2009.090104
Filename
4740883
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