• DocumentCode
    675378
  • Title

    Fully fabric knitted antennas for wearable electronics

  • Author

    Shiyu Zhang ; Chauraya, Alford ; Seager, Rob ; Vardaxoglou, Yiannis C. ; Whittow, William ; Acti, Tessa ; Dias, T.

  • Author_Institution
    Sch. of Electron., Loughborough Univ., Loughborough, UK
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    7-13 July 2013
  • Firstpage
    215
  • Lastpage
    215
  • Abstract
    Summary form only given. The worldwide wearable technology market is expected to exceed $6B by 2016 and wearable antennas will be used by the emergency services, fashion designers, military, athletes and patients. Exploring different methods of fabricating antennas is important especially as user comfort and aesthetics are key considerations in ensuring mainstream acceptance. Previously the authors have examined embroidered antennas using highly conductive threads [Chauraya et al. EuCAP 2012]. Please see this paper for a detailed literature review of wearable antennas. In this paper, we examine knitting as a technique of fabricating antennas. These antennas were fully fabric with a knitted ground plane, a knitted substrate and a knitted patch element. They were fabricated using industrial knitting machinery and hence could potentially be scaled up to mass-manufacture. Four different versions were considered (all had a knitted ground plane and substrate): i) a conducting coated nylon fabric (Nora Dell); ii) a knitted patch with a high fiber density (Sample 1); iii) a knitted patch with a medium fiber density (Sample 2) and iv) a knitted patch with a coarse fiber density (Sample 3). The resulting antennas were extremely flexible and soft to the touch. The return loss results are shown in the figure. All the antennas were fed with a probe feed positioned the same distance from the edge of the patch - the magnitude of the return loss could be improved by finding the optimal feeding point. The S11 and associated bandwidth results of the antennas suggests that the Nora Dell antenna exhibits the smallest losses. The results also indicate that the losses of the knitted antennas improve as the knitted patches became denser. The presentation will include measured radiation patterns, efficiency results and an in-depth analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of this manufacturing technique.
  • Keywords
    antenna feeds; antenna radiation patterns; fabrics; machinery; microstrip antennas; wearable antennas; Nora Dell antenna; coarse fiber density; conducting coated nylon fabric; conductive threads; embroidered antennas; fabric knitted antennas; knitted ground plane; knitted patch element; knitted patches; knitted substrate; knitting machinery; optimal feeding point; probe feed; radiation patterns; wearable antennas; wearable electronics; Antennas; Consumer electronics; Educational institutions; Electronic mail; Fabrics; Substrates; Wearable computers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Radio Science Meeting (Joint with AP-S Symposium), 2013 USNC-URSI
  • Conference_Location
    Lake Buena Vista, FL
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4799-1128-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/USNC-URSI.2013.6715521
  • Filename
    6715521