Abstract

Intra-body communication (IBC) uses the human body as the transmission medium for electrical signals, and it features the following advantages: low power consumption, strong anti-interference ability, high data security, and broad application scenarios. However, some technical issues still need to be addresses, such as the choice of the best modulation and demodulation scheme in different application scenarios, influence of human activity on IBC performance, variable signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and influence of transmission distance change on different modulation and demodulation methods. This paper adopts direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS) communication and phase modulation to realize DSSS-differential phase shift keying (DPSK) and DPSK modulation transmission of baseband data. Moreover, the Costas loop method is employed to achieve reliable symbol recovery. Under the same conditions, in vivo experiments were conducted to compare the performance of DSSS-DPSK and DPSK galvanic coupling IBC transceivers. Notably, these transceivers are affected by the changes in SNR, transmission distance, and human activities. Results show that the bit error rate (BER) of the DPSK scheme is 40 times larger than the DSSS-DPSK scheme in a 30 cm channel length and different SNR experiments. When the BER performance changes from extremely poor (1.40 ร—10 -1 ) to excellent (1.51ร—10 -6 ), the SNR of DSSS-DPSK scheme only needs to be improved by 16 dB. In contrast, when the BER performance changes from extremely poor (1.54 ร—10 -1 ) to good (1.65 ร—10 -5 ), the SNR of DPSK scheme needs to be improved by 25 dB. With a SNR of -5 dB, the BER ratios of the DPSK scheme is 7 times larger than the DSSS-DPSK scheme. Also, DSSS-DPSK scheme is more sensitive to changes in motion status than DPSK.

Highlights

  • Intra-body communication (IBC) technology uses the human body as an electrical signal transmission medium for establishing communication [1], [2]

  • bandpass filter (BPF) TEST AND PERFORMANCE PARAMETERS The S21 and S11 parameters of a passive BPF are shown in Fig. 11 and are as follows: passband of โˆ’3 dB is from 1.6 MHz to 2.4 MHz

  • Lower coupling amplitude and good bit error rate (BER) performance, which is very important for low power design in practical applications

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Intra-body communication (IBC) technology uses the human body as an electrical signal transmission medium for establishing communication [1], [2]. The galvanic coupling technique has better adaptability and stability than other types of IBC because the information transmission process occurs completely on the human body and is not easy affected by external influences [8]. A galvanic coupling IBC transceiver with continuous-phase frequency shift keying (2CPFSK) signal modulation and non-coherent demodulation was designed on the FPGA platform. The above-mentioned reports [13]โ€“[18] did not compare the performance of galvanic coupling IBC transceivers employing different modulation methods under the same conditions (i.e., test environment, test equipment, experimental settings, and similar peripheral circuits). Good anti-noise performance can resist the effects of human activities, low-frequency bioelectricity, and channel length changes, as well as improve the IBC systemโ€™s reliability. This study includes an analysis of the influence of changes in SNR, transmission distance, and human activity, making the conclusions credible and effective

METHODS
RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call