Title :
Body-obstructed fading characteristics of an in-ward 2.45 GHz biomedical telecommand link
Author :
Scanlon, W.G. ; Crumley, G.C. ; Evans, N.E.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Mech. Eng., Ulster Univ., Newtownabbey, UK
Abstract :
The increasing use of short-range radio links for applications such as ward or home based physiological monitoring creates the need for a better knowledge and understanding of the indoor propagation environment. The work presented concerns a body-worn, cross-band UHF transponder used for physiological signaling within single-room environments. A modified image-based ray-tracing algorithm is used to calculate the fading characteristics for a link under the worst case condition, when the direct path between the source and chest-mounted receiver is obstructed by the body itself. The approach adopted utilizes a FDTD-generated radiation pattern of a realistic adult-male body model, incorporating the directional gains into the three-dimensional indoor ray-tracing algorithm. A description of the biomedical transponder is followed by details of the computational technique; path loss and small area fading results are then presented for a 76 m/sup 2/ area representing a hospital ward. The cumulative distribution function (CDF) results were found to be characteristically bi-modal and this novel feature is investigated in more detail.
Keywords :
UHF radio propagation; biomedical telemetry; electromagnetic wave absorption; fading channels; finite difference time-domain analysis; indoor radio; radio links; radiotelemetry; ray tracing; transponders; 3D indoor ray-tracing algorithm; FDTD-generated radiation pattern; UHF; adult-male body model; biomedical transponder; body-obstructed fading characteristics; body-worn cross-band UHF transponder; chest-mounted receiver; cumulative distribution function; directional gains; hospital ward; in-ward biomedical telecommand link; indoor propagation environment; modified image-based ray-tracing algorithm; path loss; physiological signaling; short-range radio links; single-room environments; small area fading; ward based physiological monitoring; worst case condition; Antenna radiation patterns; Biological system modeling; Biomedical monitoring; Detectors; Fading; Finite difference methods; Receivers; Telecommunications; Time domain analysis; Transponders;
Conference_Titel :
Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, 1999. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5639-x
DOI :
10.1109/APS.1999.789158