Slotted Wearable Antenna for WLAN and LTE Applications

Author(s):  
Nupr Gupta ◽  
Rishabh Kumar Baudh ◽  
D. C. Dhubkarya ◽  
Ravi Kant Prasad

Slotted wearable antenna is designed at frequency 2.4 GHz due to its application for wireless application and radiolocation. Proposed antenna is used for radiolocation through which detection of objects is possible using a tracking system of radio waves by analyzing the properties of received radio waves. Proposed design employs denim material as a substrate with copper patch as conducting layer. Denim fabric layer of 1mm thickness with permittivity of 1.7 and loss tangent of 0.025 is used as substrate. Dimensions of proposed antenna are calculated using a transmission line model. Proposed antenna has bandwidth percentage of 46% with center frequency 2.42 GHz, and it has high radiation efficiency 93.69%. It covers the frequency range between 2.18 GHz and 3.49 GHz, which works on WLAN applications (2.4-2.484 GHz) and LTE band (2.17 GHz).

Author(s):  
Reji V ◽  
C. T. Manimegalai

Printed antennas are designed for various applications in recent years. The latest development of antennas are wearable antennas; these wearable antennas are playing a major role in the energy harvesting mechanisms, patient monitoring systems, and military applications. In this chapter a reconfigurable wearable antenna is proposed. Reconfigurable wearable antennas are able to operate in both modes on body and off body. These antennas are reconfigured from one frequency to another frequency depending upon the requirement. Three types of reconfigurable antenna modes are designed and analyzed in the chapter. Frequency reconfiguration with off body mode and on body mode, frequency reconfiguration between inside receiver and outside interrogator, and frequency reconfiguration with different substrate conditions. The choice of frequency bands are WBAN and other wireless application bands. Different switches are used to control the frequencies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga Yushkova ◽  
Taisiya Dymova ◽  
Viktor Popovnin

<p>Radio echo-sounding is a powerful technique for investigating the subsurface of the glaciers. However, physics underlying the formation of the reflected signal is sometimes oversimplified  in the geophysical glacier studies, leading to wrong results. Various remote sensing techniques use different wavelengths (e.g., 13.575 GHz for CryoSat and 20-25/200-600 MHz for ground-penetrating radar), but it is still not clear which particular wavelengths are the best to detect different characteristics of the ice. Possibly, the results gained using different wavelengths may not coincide but rather complement each other due to frequency dependence of the dielectric permittivity and conductivity of snow, ice and especially water.</p><p>Here we attempt to construct an electrophysical model of a cold glacier. This mathematical model considers the variability of the depth profile of the complex dielectric permittivity depending on the frequency of the probing radio signal and the surface temperature. A series of calculations of the reflection coefficients of radio waves from the modelled glacier show that at low temperatures for frequencies above 1 MHz the real part of the dielectric constant of the glacier does not change with frequency and surface temperature, but depends on the glacier structure, while the depth profile of the loss tangent is constant throughout the glacier.  As wavelength decreases, the absorption of radio-waves by the glacier decreases and the frequency dependence of the reflection coefficient becomes a periodic function, its period and amplitude depend on the glacier thickness, the dielectric constant of the bedrock and ice on the surface.</p><p>The range of radio-waves from 0.1 to 1 MHz is not optimal for sounding cold glaciers: the absorption of radio-waves by ice is large for studying thick layers of the glacier, and the wavelength does not allow studying thin layers. Hence, reflection from the glacier surface prevails upon reflection of the signal. The small absorption of short radio waves by ice leads to the fact that the frequency dependence of the reflection coefficient of short radio-waves is practically the sum of the partial reflections of radio-waves from the surface and internal snow/firn and firn/ice boundaries. Period and amplitude of oscillations of the function  depend on the depth of the internal boundaries and the gradient of dielectric characteristics of ice, snow, firn and bedrock.</p><p>Changes in surface temperature, leading to a change in the loss tangent of the upper glacier layers, are manifested in the phase magnitude of the reflection coefficient of radio-waves:it grows with the temperature. Theoretically, the high-frequency signal reflected from the glacier contains information about the structure of the cold glacier and the depth distribution of the dielectric constant, but to restore the electrophysical parameters of the glaciers, it is necessary to use a broadband signal with smooth spectrum and high digitization speed.</p><p>The reported study was funded by RFBR, project number 18-05-60080 (“Dangerous nival-glacial and cryogenic processes and their impact on infrastructure in the Arctic”).</p>


2019 ◽  
pp. 105-113
Author(s):  
Andrey Pobedinsky ◽  
Vladimir Pobedinsky ◽  
Sergey Sannikov

Introduction. The article discusses the topical problem of designing a specialized forest resources tracking system. The analysis of domestic and foreign literature on the creation of monitoring information systems is carried out. One of the requirements for the system should take into account the instantaneous receipt of information about the state of the forest environment, take into account the specificity of the variability of many parameters of the forest environment, which may vary to a large extent, compliance with many rules regulated by legislation in the field of forest management. On the basis of the requirements presented the system of RFID-devices. Materials and methods. The materials used were wireless sensors, an information system for information collection and notification. Methodological work is based on the theory of radio waves propagation of different frequencies, mathematical statistics and experimental theory. Results. The results of the research are radio waves passing through a certain number of obstacles in the forest area, reflecting their geometric dimensions, determined by the parameter characterizing the occupancy of the channel resource, necessary for the transfer of information. Discussions and conclusions. The scientific novelty of the researches offers an information system of control over the forest resources, the monitoring of which is carried out continuously, taking into account all the necessary requirements, namely: the absence of harmful radiation, efficiency, energy consumption, durability, the propagation of radio waves at not prohibited frequencies for the Russian Federation, the definition of natural parameters, the detection of movement, the detection of fire at the initial stage.


Wireless body area networks have paying more attention in the recent decade. The microstrip textile antenna used for wireless applications (ISM Band) such as emergency rescue, health monitoring and medical care. In this paper, the square patch microstrip textile antenna is introduced which is mounted on the flexible jeans substrate. The physical size of the suggested/simulated textile antenna is 52.99 X 45.23 mm2 & the jean’s material is used as substrate with its relative permittivity of ɛr = 1.67. The proposed antenna is radiating at the center frequency of 2.45 GHz with a return loss of -15.76 dB & VSWR 1.389, the far field directivity of an antenna is 8.05 dBi at 2.45GHz. The designed antenna is wearable on the clothes because the use of textile material for antenna fabrication by keeping SAR at 1.6 W/Kg.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (2.12) ◽  
pp. 222
Author(s):  
Reema Dubey ◽  
Vinod Kumar Singh ◽  
Akash Kumar Bhoi ◽  
Zakir Ali

The endeavor of this paper is to analyze a light weighted flexible antenna for modern communication system. There are three different patch designs with operating frequency 4GHz. These proposed antennas are compact in size, shows high directivity and large bandwidth. Ex-pandable polystyrene foam is used as a substrate because such antenna are bendable, wearable, cheap, require less attention and having good features like low dielectric constant, low loss tangent and better efficiency. The antenna parameters like reflection coefficient, gain, band-width, radiation pattern are analyzed. The reflection coefficient of anticipated antenna provides a good concurrence between simulated and measured result. Foam based design is simulated by using CST studio. 


Author(s):  
M. V. Wilkes

The earliest suggestion that there might be a conducting layer in the earth's atmosphere was made in 1839 by Gauss, who was concerned to explain the diurnal geomagnetic phenomena, and who pointed out that a possible hypothesis was that they arose from electric currents encircling the earth somewhere in the atmosphere. However, at that time, no mechanism to account for the existence of a conducting layer could be suggested, nor was there any knowledge of how air could become conducting; indeed, until ionizing radiation began to be studied, it was even suggested that air naturally became conducting at low pressure. It was soon apparent that the propagation of radio waves beyond the horizon could not be explained as the result of diffraction. Heaviside and Kennelly, at about the same time, both proposed that a conducting layer in the atmosphere was responsible. It was Appleton who first showed, by an elegant and well planned series of experiments, that this was indeed the case; or to put it more precisely, that at a point distant from the transmitter there was, in addition to a wave received along the surface of the earth, a second wave descending from the sky.


2021 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhengrui He ◽  
Jie Jin

A flexible and compact coplanar waveguide feed (CPW-fed) wearable antenna is introduced for wireless wearable communications applications at the industrial scientific medical (ISM) band. The proposed antenna consists of copper, which is used as the radiation patch and ground planes printed on the same side of polyimide flexible substrate. The overall size of the antenna is 30 mm × 28 mm × 0.08 mm, the results show that the antenna can transmit and receive signals in two frequency bands of 1.89–2.67 GHz and 3.02–3.23 GHz, in which radiating properties are characterized and agree well with the simulation results. The antenna is bent in different directions to further investigate the reflection coefficient and corresponding effect on the antenna under bending. The center frequency of the antenna is slightly shifted towards higher and lower frequencies when antenna is bent in X-axis and Y-axis, respectively. Furthermore, the wearability of the antenna is verified when the antenna is placed on different parts of the human body such as wrist and chest. Hence, the proposed flexible antenna is a suitable candidate for wearable wireless communication applications.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sébastien L. Delprat ◽  
JaeHo Oh ◽  
Feng Xu ◽  
Lin Li ◽  
Erick E. Djoumessi ◽  
...  

This paper presents simulation and measurement results of fully distributed tunable coplanar bandpass filters (BPFs) with center frequencies around 6 GHz that make use of ferroelectric Barium Strontium Titanate (BaxSr1−xTiO3 or BST-x) thin film as tunable material. The two experimental bandpass filters tested are based on a novel frequency-agile structure composed of cascaded half wavelength slow-wave resonators (2 poles) and three coupled interdigital capacitors (IDCs) optimized for bias voltage application. Devices with gap dimensions of 10 and 3 μm are designed and fabricated with a two-step process on polycrystalline Ba0.5Sr0.5TiO3 thin films deposited on alumina substrate. A frequency tunability of 9% is obtained for the 10 μm gap structure at ±30 V with 7 dB insertion loss (the BST dielectric tunability being 26% with 0.04 loss tangent for this gap size). When the structure gap is reduced to 3 μm the center frequency shifts with a constant 9 dB insertion loss from 6.95 GHz at 0 V to 9.05 GHz at ±30 V, thus yielding a filter tunability of 30% (the BST dielectric tunability being 60% with 0.04 loss tangent for this gap size), a performance comparable to some extent to localized or lumped element BPFs operating at microwave frequency (>2 GHz).


2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
ONAIFO FRANK ◽  
OKANDEJI ALEXANDER AKPOFURE ◽  
IDOWU FISAYO ◽  
OLASUNKANMI OMOWUMMI GRACE ◽  
OLALUWOYE OLAWALE ◽  
...  

<p>This paper is aimed at designing a locally fabricated fiberglass parabolic antenna as a replacement for a metallic fabricated parabolic antenna. They are coated with a thin film of aluminum dust to enhance reflectivity since electromagnetic radiations do not travel deep in a conductor. This reduces the thick mass of metal usually used for constructing metallic parabolic antenna leading to a reduced cost of production. It incorporates a Low Noise Block (LNB) Converter comprising of amplifiers and frequency down converter. Metallic parabolic antenna contributes more to signal loss by reflecting radio waves. The Parabolic antenna is designed to receive microwave signals in the K-band with the down converter converting it to very high frequency (VHF) and ultra-high frequency (UHF) employing the super-heterodyning principle. The study shows the design and installation of a low-cost parabolic antenna in the rural community in Nigeria. The designed parabolic antenna is used to receive a signal with the center frequency of 11.3GHz and signal strength of 60%. The economic viability is that fiber-glass Parabolic antenna can replace the metallic fabricated ones.</p>


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