19,383 research outputs found

    On-body wearable repeater as a data link relay for in-body wireless implants

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    Wireless medical devices implanted at different locations in the human body have a wide application range. Yet, high-data-rate communication in the 2.4-GHz Industrial, Scientific, and Medical band suffers from high in-body attenuation loss. Link improvement cannot be obtained by simply increasing transmit power, as battery life is limited and in-body absorption has to remain low. To overcome these problems, a flexible on-body textile patch antenna, robustly matched directly to the human body, is designed and developed as part of a wearable repeater, enhancing communication with implanted wireless devices. This receive antenna, which can cope with different morphologies and patient movements, enables reliable high data rate and low-power communication links with an implant. A data link measurement is performed for the on-body repeater system placed on the human torso, relaying the signals to nearby medical equipment, without wired connection to the patient. The performance of the data link is experimentally assessed in different measurement scenarios. For a repeater system relying on simple analog amplification, which is low-cost, energy-efficient, and can be fully integrated into clothing, excellent results are obtained, with an average measured signal-to-noise ratio of 33 dB for tissue depths up to 85 mm

    Substrate integrated waveguide textile antennas as energy harvesting platforms

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    Textile multi-antenna systems are key components of smart fabric and interactive textile (SFIT) systems, as they establish reliable and energy-efficient wireless body-centric communication links. In this work, we investigate how their functionality can further be extended by exploiting their surface as an energy harvesting and power management platform. We provide guidelines for selecting an appropriate antenna topology and describe a suitable integration procedure. We demonstrate this approach by integrating two flexible solar cells, a micro-energy cell and a flexible power management system onto a well-chosen wearable substrate integrated waveguide cavity-backed textile slot antenna, without affecting its performance, to enable energy harvesting from solar and artificial light. In addition, the compact and highly-integrated harvesting module provides a terminal for connecting a thermoelectric generator, enabling thermal body energy harvesting. Measurements in a realistic indoor environment have demonstrated that this hybrid energy harvesting approach leverages a more continuous flow of scavenged energy, enabling energy scavenging in most of the indoor and outdoor scenarios

    Considering the User in the Wireless World

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    The near future promises significant advances in communication capabilities, but one of the keys to success is the capability understanding of the people with regards to its value and usage. In considering the role of the user in the wireless world of the future, the Human Perspective Working Group (WG1) of the Wireless World Research Forum has gathered input and developed positions in four important areas: methods, processes, and best practices for user-centered research and design; reference frameworks for modeling user needs within the context of wireless systems; user scenario creation and analysis; and user interaction technologies. This article provides an overview of WG1's work in these areas that are critical to ensuring that the future wireless world meets and exceeds the expectations of people in the coming decades

    Wearable flexible lightweight modular RFID tag with integrated energy harvester

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    A novel wearable radio frequency identification (RFID) tag with sensing, processing, and decision-taking capability is presented for operation in the 2.45-GHz RFID superhigh frequency (SHF) band. The tag is powered by an integrated light harvester, with a flexible battery serving as an energy buffer. The proposed active tag features excellent wearability, very high read range, enhanced functionality, flexible interfacing with diverse low-power sensors, and extended system autonomy through an innovative holistic microwave system design paradigm that takes antenna design into consideration from the very early stages. Specifically, a dedicated textile shorted circular patch antenna with monopolar radiation pattern is designed and optimized for highly efficient and stable operation within the frequency band of operation. In this process, the textile antenna's functionality is augmented by reusing its surface as an integration platform for light-energy-harvesting, sensing, processing, and transceiver hardware, without sacrificing antenna performance or the wearer's comfort. The RFID tag is validated by measuring its stand-alone and on-body characteristics in free-space conditions. Moreover, measurements in a real-world scenario demonstrate an indoor read range up to 23 m in nonline-of-sight indoor propagation conditions, enabling interrogation by a reader situated in another room. In addition, the RFID platform only consumes 168.3 mu W, when sensing and processing are performed every 60 s

    Novel small-size directional antenna for UWB WBAN/WPAN applications

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    Using remote vision: The effects of video image frame rate on visual object recognition performance

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    This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below. Copyright @ 2010 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other users, including reprinting/ republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted components of this work in other works.The process of using remote vision was simulated in order to determine the effects of video image frame rate on the performance in visual recognition of stationary environmental hazards in the dynamic video footage of the pedestrian travel environment. The recognition performance was assessed against two different video image frame rate variations: 25 and 2 fps. The assessment included a range of objective and subjective criteria. The obtained results show that the effects of the frame rate variations on the performance are statistically insignificant. This paper belongs to the process of development of a novel system for navigation of visually impaired pedestrians. The navigation system includes a remote vision facility, and the visual recognition of the environmental hazards by the sighted human guide is a basic activity in aiding the visually impaired user of the system in mobility

    Multiple Antenna Techniques for Terahertz Nano-Bio Communication

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    Using higher frequency bands becomes an essential demand resulting from the explosive wireless traffic needs and the spectrum shortage of the currently used bands. This paper presents an overview on the terahertz technology and its application in the area of multi-input multi-output antenna system and in-vivo nano-communication. In addition, it presents a preliminary study on applying multiple input-single output (MISO) antenna technique to investigate the signal propagation and antenna diversity techniques inside the human skin tissues, which is represented by three layers: stratum corneum (SC), epidermis, and dermis layers, in the terahertz (THz) frequency range (0.8-1.2) THz. The spatial antenna diversity is investigated in this study to understand MISO system performance for two different in-vivo channels resulting from the signal propagation between two transmitting antennas, located at the dermis layer, and one receiving antenna, located at epidermis layer. Three techniques are investigated: selection combining (SC), equal-gain combing (EGC), and maximum-ratio combining (MRC). The initial study indicates that using multiple antenna technique with THz might be not useful for in-vivo nano-communication
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