Published July 9, 2020
| Version v1
Publication
Lessons Learned about the Design and Active Characterization of On-Body Antennas in the 2.4 GHz Frequency Band
Description
This work addresses the design and experimental characterization of on-body antennas,
which play an essential role within Body Sensor Networks. Four antenna designs were selected
from a set of eighteen antenna choices and finally implemented for both passive and active
measurements. The issues raised during the process of this work (requirements study, technology
selection, development and optimization of antennas, impedance matching, unbalanced to balanced
transformation, passive and active characterization, off-body and on-body configurations, etc.) were
studied and solved, driving a methodology for the characterization of on-body antennas, including
transceiver effects. Despite the influence of the body, the antennas showed appropriate results for
an in-door environment. Another novelty is the proposal and validation of a phantom to emulate
human experimentation. The differences between experimental and simulated results highlight a set
of circumstances to be taken into account during the design process of an on-body antenna: more
comprehensive simulation schemes to take into account the hardware effects and a custom design
process that considers the application for which the device will be used, as well as the effects that can
be caused by the human body.
Abstract
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Instituto de Salud Carlos III) PI15/00306Abstract
Junta de Andalucía PIN-0394-2017Abstract
Unión Europea "FRAIL"Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/99157
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/99157
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE