Publication | Closed Access
Radio channel characterization for 400 MHz implanted devices
11
Citations
8
References
2014
Year
Unknown Venue
Wireless CommunicationsBody Area NetworkMedical ElectronicsEngineeringRadio FrequencyWearable TechnologyBiomedical EngineeringWireless Implantable DeviceRadio Channel CharacterizationElectromagnetic CompatibilityKinesiologyWireless Communication ChannelWireless ModelingHuman BodyElectrical EngineeringAntennaComputer EngineeringSignal ProcessingBioelectronicsPath LossElectrophysiologyWireless PropagationRf Subsystem
The wireless communication channel around/in the human body is a difficult propagation environment. This paper presents measurement and simulation results to characterize such a channel. A fluid human body model is employed to emulate the inside of a human body. The paper details the fluid human model and path loss model parameters at 400 MHz (MICS band). It is shown that the simulated and measured results are in a close agreement, for instance at a distance of 20 cm and a implant depth of 10 cm, the measurement results in a path loss of -42.1 dB and the simulation in -43.0 dB. The effect of human model shape on measured path loss is analyzed. Furthermore, simulations are employed to characterize this effect. Using the path loss model a top-level link budget is evaluated to determine the feasibility of a given implant device compliant to IEEE802.15.6-WBAN-400 MHz standard.
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