Abstract

One of promising transmission technologies in wireless body area networks (BANs) is ultra-wideband (UWB) communication, which can provide high data rate for real-time transmission, and extremely low power consumption for increasing device longevity. However, UWB signals suffer from large attenuation in a wireless communication link, especially in implant BANs. Although several investigations on channel characterization have been far thus conducted for evaluating the UWB transmission performance, they have been limited to either computer simulations or experiments with biological-equivalent phantoms. Experimental evaluation with a living body has rarely been conducted, i.e., the performance in real implant BANs has been scarcely discussed. In this paper, therefore, we focus on a living animal experimental evaluation on the UWB transmission performance. To begin with, we develop an ultra-wideband impulse radio (UWB-IR) communication system with a multipulse pulse position modulation scheme, and then analyze the fundamental characteristics of the developed UWB-IR communication system by a liquid phantom experiment. Finally, we evaluate the performance of the developed UWB-IR communication system via the living animal experiment. From the experimental results, although we have observed that the path loss is more than 80 dB, the developed system can achieve a bit error rate of 10-2 within the communication distance of 120 mm with ensuring a high data rate of 1 Mb/s. This result first time gives a quantitative communication performance evaluation for the implant UWB transmission in a living body.

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