Abstract

One of the major challenges in the development of wearable antennas is to design an antenna that can at the same time satisfy technical requirements, be aesthetically acceptable, and be suitable for wearable applications. In this paper, a novel wearable antenna is proposed—textile realization of a slotted waveguide antenna. The antenna is realized using conductive fabric to manufacture the walls of a rectangular waveguide in which the slots were cut out. All connections and cuts are sewn with conductive thread taking over advantages of the traditional process of manufacturing textile objects. The developed slotted waveguide array prototype, containing three slots and designed for operation in the 5.8-GHz ISM band, is experimentally characterized and compared to an equivalent metallic antenna. The achieved operating bandwidth is larger than 300 MHz in both cases. The measured gain of a textile slotted waveguide array is around 9 dBi with a radiation efficiency larger than 50% in the whole operating bandwidth, i.e., the textile array showed a 2 dB lower gain in comparison to the metallic counterpart. The gain is stable in the whole bandwidth and the radiation patterns do not differ. The results demonstrated that such textile antennas are suitable for body-centric communication and sensor systems and can be integrated into clothing, e.g., into a smart safety vest or into a uniform. Further analysis of various realizations of slotted waveguide antennas is presented showing that different versions of the proposed antenna can be used in all three off-body, on-body, and in-body communication scenarios.

Highlights

  • Wireless connectivity is becoming ever more important in present-day life

  • The results demonstrated that such textile antennas are suitable for body-centric communication and sensor systems and can be integrated into clothing, e.g., into a smart safety vest or into a uniform

  • The aim of this paper is to explore properties of a textile slotted waveguide antenna array [16] that could be attached to a jacket, vest, belt, or another article of clothing

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Summary

Introduction

Wireless connectivity is becoming ever more important in present-day life. The advent of the Internet-of-Things [1] and enabling technologies introduced in 5G [2] and expanded in the forthcoming 6G mobile communications foster this connectivity [3,4]. Textile antennas find their application as they can be seamlessly integrated in clothing, offering the wearer freedom in daily activities while enabling the connectivity to off-body wireless access points, establishing Wireless Body Area Networks (WBAN), and communication with wearable and implantable devices and sensors. Application of such communications are numerous [5]; from rescue services, security, surveillance, and military applications, to healthcare and telemedicine, sports and entertainment. In-body operation is discussed and necessary modifications for this mode of operation are outlined, since high permittivity and lossy dielectric such as human tissue significantly influence the construction and optimal dimensions of slotted waveguide antenna

Experimental Characterization of Textile Slotted Waveguide Antenna
Antennas for Body-Centric Wireless Communications
Off-Body Communication
On-Body Communication
Conclusions
Full Text
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