1,448 research outputs found

    Energy-efficient off-body communication nodes with receive diversity

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    Off-body wireless communication applications range from fall-detection systems for the elderly to monitoring networks for rescue workers. Further development of practical body-worn systems requires compact, low-cost and low-power battery-powered equipment. A versatile wearable network node offering all these features, including a powerful microcontroller for data processing and additional memory for local data logging was designed and implemented. The node allows receive diversity, mitigating the negative impact of fading, which is typically present in indoor propagation environments. Channel measurements are performed for an indoor Non Line-of-Sight communication between two nodes. Mobile-to-base-station as well as mobile-to-mobile links are considered. A statistical analysis of the performance determines outage probability with and without receiver diversity for both link types, showing a significant diversity gain in all cases. Correlation properties, level crossing rate and average fade duration are also determined

    MIMO and beamforming techniques for reliable off-body communication using textile antennas

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    Wireless communication systems with textile antennas can be entirely integrated into clothing or garment and do not hinder the user’s movements. Great interest in such an off-body communication system exists in the field of rescue operations, such as firefighting, where the automated communication of vital data between rescue workers or to a base station improves the coordination of the operation and the safety of the rescue workers. To set up a reliable wireless off-body communication link, a number of specific challenges need to be overcome. Persons equipped with wearable antennas constantly change position, orientation, walking pace and body posture. This results in unpredictably variable fading and shadowing on the received signals, producing bit errors, even in case of a high average received signal-to-noise ratio. Fading and shadowing hence dramatically limit the reliability of a communication system with single antennas at both link ends. Using multiple textile antennas, the performance degradation is drastically limited, by means of MIMO and/or beamforming techniques, which mitigate the signal variation and/or produce a higher average signal-to-noise ratio at the receiver, respectively. The research documented in this PhD thesis includes multiple measurement campaigns and their analysis for a diverse number of off-body communication configurations, using MIMO and beamforming techniques with textile antennas. Off-body MIMO techniques are shown to result in a significant improvement of the reliability of the communication, an improvement which further increases when more antennas are used. Channel variation typically of the off-body scenario is tracked with a computationally low-cost system, using adaptive digital low-pass filtering on decision-oriented channel estimation information. Off-body static beamforming techniques are shown to often outperform transmit diversity systems, producing a lower bit error rate at the receiver, provided that receiver diversity is employed to compensate for the channel variation. Finally, a new theoretical model specifically for the off-body MIMO communication channel is presented, allowing an accurate reproduction of bit error rate and channel capacity characteristics as well as the generation of measurement-like random off-body MIMO channel realizations for simulation purposes

    Cooperative Radio Communications for Green Smart Environments

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    The demand for mobile connectivity is continuously increasing, and by 2020 Mobile and Wireless Communications will serve not only very dense populations of mobile phones and nomadic computers, but also the expected multiplicity of devices and sensors located in machines, vehicles, health systems and city infrastructures. Future Mobile Networks are then faced with many new scenarios and use cases, which will load the networks with different data traffic patterns, in new or shared spectrum bands, creating new specific requirements. This book addresses both the techniques to model, analyse and optimise the radio links and transmission systems in such scenarios, together with the most advanced radio access, resource management and mobile networking technologies. This text summarises the work performed by more than 500 researchers from more than 120 institutions in Europe, America and Asia, from both academia and industries, within the framework of the COST IC1004 Action on "Cooperative Radio Communications for Green and Smart Environments". The book will have appeal to graduates and researchers in the Radio Communications area, and also to engineers working in the Wireless industry. Topics discussed in this book include: • Radio waves propagation phenomena in diverse urban, indoor, vehicular and body environments• Measurements, characterization, and modelling of radio channels beyond 4G networks• Key issues in Vehicle (V2X) communication• Wireless Body Area Networks, including specific Radio Channel Models for WBANs• Energy efficiency and resource management enhancements in Radio Access Networks• Definitions and models for the virtualised and cloud RAN architectures• Advances on feasible indoor localization and tracking techniques• Recent findings and innovations in antenna systems for communications• Physical Layer Network Coding for next generation wireless systems• Methods and techniques for MIMO Over the Air (OTA) testin

    Cooperative Radio Communications for Green Smart Environments

    Get PDF
    The demand for mobile connectivity is continuously increasing, and by 2020 Mobile and Wireless Communications will serve not only very dense populations of mobile phones and nomadic computers, but also the expected multiplicity of devices and sensors located in machines, vehicles, health systems and city infrastructures. Future Mobile Networks are then faced with many new scenarios and use cases, which will load the networks with different data traffic patterns, in new or shared spectrum bands, creating new specific requirements. This book addresses both the techniques to model, analyse and optimise the radio links and transmission systems in such scenarios, together with the most advanced radio access, resource management and mobile networking technologies. This text summarises the work performed by more than 500 researchers from more than 120 institutions in Europe, America and Asia, from both academia and industries, within the framework of the COST IC1004 Action on "Cooperative Radio Communications for Green and Smart Environments". The book will have appeal to graduates and researchers in the Radio Communications area, and also to engineers working in the Wireless industry. Topics discussed in this book include: • Radio waves propagation phenomena in diverse urban, indoor, vehicular and body environments• Measurements, characterization, and modelling of radio channels beyond 4G networks• Key issues in Vehicle (V2X) communication• Wireless Body Area Networks, including specific Radio Channel Models for WBANs• Energy efficiency and resource management enhancements in Radio Access Networks• Definitions and models for the virtualised and cloud RAN architectures• Advances on feasible indoor localization and tracking techniques• Recent findings and innovations in antenna systems for communications• Physical Layer Network Coding for next generation wireless systems• Methods and techniques for MIMO Over the Air (OTA) testin

    Integration of electronic systems on wearable textile antenna platforms

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    Personal area technologies for internetworked services

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