Antennas for over-body-surface communication at 2.45 GHz

G.A. Conway, W.G. Scanlon

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    256 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Modeling of on-body propagation channels is of paramount importance to those wishing to evaluate radio channel performance for wearable devices in body area networks (BANs). Difficulties in modeling arise due to the highly variable channel conditions related to changes in the user's state and local environment. This study characterizes these influences by using time-series analysis to examine and model signal characteristics for on-body radio channels in user stationary and mobile scenarios in four different locations: anechoic chamber, open office area, hallway, and outdoor environment. Autocorrelation and cross-correlation functions are reported and shown to be dependent on body state and surroundings. Autoregressive (AR) transfer functions are used to perform time-series analysis and develop models for fading in various on-body links. Due to the non-Gaussian nature of the logarithmically transformed observed signal envelope in the majority of mobile user states, a simple method for reproducing the fading based on lognormal and Nakagami statistics is proposed. The validity of the AR models is evaluated using hypothesis testing, which is based on the Ljung-Box statistic, and the estimated distributional parameters of the simulator output compared with those from experimental results.
    Original languageUndefined
    Pages (from-to)844-855
    Number of pages13
    JournalIEEE transactions on antennas and propagation
    Volume57
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Apr 2009

    Keywords

    • EWI-20062
    • IR-76728
    • METIS-275994

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