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Antenna development for wearable wireless sensing systems
O'Flynn, Brendan; Gaetano, Domenico; Buckley, John
Date:2009-09-24
Copyright:(c) 2009 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from
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Citation:O'FLYNN, B. GAETANO, D. & BUCKLEY, J. 2009. Antenna Development for Wearable Wireless Sensing Systems. Proc. IMAPS-CPMT Poland 2009, Gliwice – Pszczyna, Poland, 22-24 Sept, 2009
Abstract:
Embedded wireless sensor network (WSN) systems have been developed and used in a wide
variety of applications such as local automatic environmental monitoring; medical applications analysing
aspects of fitness and health energy metering and management in the built environment as well as traffic
pattern analysis and control applications. While the purpose and functions of embedded wireless sensor
networks have a myriad of applications and possibilities in the future, a particular implementation of
these ambient sensors is in the area of wearable electronics incorporated into body area networks and
everyday garments. Some of these systems will incorporate inertial sensing devices and other physical
and physiological sensors with a particular focus on the application areas of athlete performance
monitoring and e-health.
Some of the important physical requirements for wearable antennas are that they are light-weight, small
and robust and should also use materials that are compatible with a standard manufacturing process such
as flexible polyimide or fr4 material where low cost consumer market oriented products are being
produced. The substrate material is required to be low loss and flexible and often necessitates the use of
thin dielectric and metallization layers. This paper describes the development of such a wearable, flexible
antenna system for ISM band wearable wireless sensor networks. The material selected for the
development of the wearable system in question is DE104i characterized by a dielectric constant of 3.8
and a loss tangent of 0.02. The antenna feed line is a 50 Ohm microstrip topology suitable for use with
standard, high-performance and low-cost SMA-type RF connector technologies, widely used for these
types of applications. The desired centre frequency is aimed at the 2.4GHz ISM band to be compatible
with IEEE 802.15.4 Zigbee communication protocols and the Bluetooth standard which operate in this
band.
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