Title :
Antennas for Over-Body-Surface Communication at 2.45 GHz
Author :
Conway, Gareth A. ; Scanlon, William G.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Queen´´s Univ. of Belfast, Belfast
fDate :
4/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In this paper, the on-body performance of a range of wearable antennas was investigated by measuring |S 21| path gain between two devices mounted on tissue-equivalent numerical and experimental phantoms, representative of human muscle tissue at 2.45 GHz. In particular, the study focused on the performance of a compact higher mode microstrip patch antenna (HMMPA) with a profile as low as lambda/20. The 5- and 10-mm-high HMMPA prototypes had an impedance bandwidth of 6.7% and 8.6%, respectively, sufficient for the operating requirements of the 2.45-GHz industrial, scientific, and medical (ISM) band and both antennas offered 11-dB higher path gain compared to a fundamental-mode microstrip patch antenna. It was also demonstrated that a 7-dB improvement in path gain can be obtained for a fundamental-mode patch through the addition of a shortening wall. Notably, on-body HMMPA performance was comparable to a quarter wave monopole antenna on the same size of groundplane, mounted normal to the tissue surface, indicating that the low-profile and physically more robust antenna is a promising solution for bodyworn antenna applications.
Keywords :
biomedical equipment; microstrip antennas; frequency 2.45 GHz; higher mode microstrip patch antenna; over-body-surface communication; wearable antennas; Antenna measurements; Gain measurement; Hidden Markov models; Humans; Imaging phantoms; Microstrip antennas; Microstrip components; Muscles; Patch antennas; Performance gain; Bodyworn; low-profile antenna; on-body communications; printed antennas; wearable antennas;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2009.2014525