Footwear and Wrist Communication Links using 2.4 GHz and UWB Antennas

It is reported that wearable electronic devices are to be used extensively in the next generation of sensors for sports and health monitoring. The information obtained from sensors on the human body depends on the biological parameters, the measurement rate and the number of sensors. The choice of the wireless protocol depends on the required data rates and on system configurations. The communication link quality is achieved with narrowband technologies such as Bluetooth or Zigbee, provided that the number of sensors is small and data rates are low. However, real-time measurements using wideband channels may also be necessary. This paper reports narrowband link performance at 2.45 GHz for comparison with two UWB channels centered at 3.95 GHz and 7.25 GHz. A monopole antenna covering 2.45 GHz and UWB is optimized for an on-body communication link between the footwear and the wrist. The cumulative distribution function of several path loss measurements is reported and compared for a subject standing and walking. Results show that the larger bandwidth in the UWB channel reduces fading and stabilizes the channel predictability.


Introduction
Wearable technologies are electronic devices located in everyday clothing and accessories.Nowadays, there is an increasing demand to monitor performance of various activities in sports [1], daily routines [2] and health care scenarios [3].The goals include measurement of biological and physical parameters with subsequent processing for different applications.These wearable devices are required to be small to avoid user discomfort.They may be integrated in a belt [4], necklace [5], shirt [6] or shoes [7].Normally the sensor position depends on the biological and physical parameters to be measured.Sensors are placed in footwear to measure various biological parameters, including plantar pressure [8], speed [9], walking and running gait [10].These data are useful to monitor everyday activity, to detect gait abnormality [9] and to detect the onset of various medical conditions [11].
These sensors need to be simple and consume low power.Combining information from different on-body deployed sensors requires a smarter and more complex node.This hub is responsible for collecting all the information to be processed, simplifying it and ultimately displaying it to the final user.The position and the technology used in the communication link between the different nodes and the main hub is important for overall system reliability.The main hub is typically located at the waist area of the body [12,13] which is equidistant to other on-body nodes thereby reducing the maximum communication distance over the whole body.It has been demonstrated that using directional antennas on footwear achieves equal or better performances than a waist-centric paradigm with omnidirectional antennas [14].However, the expansion of advanced handheld devices such as smartphones and smartwatch is shifting the hub-centric scenario from waist to the hand area.This on-body area is critical because of the rapid changes of the body posture responsible for shadowing and multipath fading behavior.The communication link must be reliable during everyday activities, including walking.
Different technologies are already used in the communication layer in the 2.45 GHz frequency band such as Bluetooth [15] and WiFi [16].These technologies are well known and widely used in many systems.However, new emerging technologies have greater data rates and are more secure.Within this framework, UWB technologies are characterized by wider bandwidths, lower power consumption and smaller range in comparison to the narrowband systems.Because of these advantages, UWB is a promising technology for the development of Body Area Networks [17].The antenna design must take the operational environment into consideration [18].On-body scenarios are characterized by close proximity to high water-content and low water-content materials which can influence the antenna performance.Besides it is important to include body movement because of fading and shadowing.
In this paper a communication link between the footwear and the wrist is studied for three different frequency ranges for a subject while walking.The footwear can be a hub location or can relay footwear sensor information to a handheld device.
Performances for footwear located antennas should consider the rapid and repetitive movement of the foot for a walking/running subject and the close proximity to the ground.The performance of a monopole antenna on the toe cap is not impaired by the ground proximity because the foot behaves as a screen, decreasing the back lobe radiation.
An antenna is designed to cover the 2.4 GHz and UWB bands and can be integrated with multimode transceivers to mitigate on-body multipath effects and to adjust the data rate to the particular request.
In the first section of the paper the antenna performances are shown in the free space and in close proximity to the body.In the second section the three frequency ranges are compared for a subject walking using S 21 measurements.

Antenna Geometry and Free Space Performance
A single-sided printed monopole antenna is easier to integrate on the surface of the upper part of the footwear or above the textile strips of a garment, without the requirement of another layer.An antenna optimized for this purpose is prototyped on a 0.2 mm single-sided FR4 layer and shown in Figure 1a.For simplicity the antenna is fed by coplanar waveguide (CPW) which is connected to a SMA connector and optimized for on-body performance from 2.4 GHz to 10 GHz.The antenna size is 40 × 50 mm 2 .A transition in the CPW is required for matching due to the connector flange.The width of the feed line and slot line under the connector is 1 mm and 1.2 mm respectively.Beyond the connector, these become 3.3 mm and 0.2 mm respectively.The antenna is then shaped with splined lines, resulting from the on-body optimization.The ground plane shape is also optimized to increase the bandwidth of the antenna with the dimension GP 1 = 13 mm, D 1 = 1 mm and D 2 = 0.8 mm.The parameters of the splines are given in Table 1.The antenna free-space S 11 is shown in Figure 1b.The simulated bandwidth of the antenna is −10 dB matched across 2.1-10 GHz.In the measurement there is a shift of the lower −10 dB frequency of 177 MHz.The measured −10 dB bandwidth for the free space antenna is within the range of 2 GHz to 8 GHz.The small disagreement between simulation and measurement is due to an imperfectly flat dielectric layer and non-uniform distance between the printed copper feed line on the dielectric of the CPW and the flange of the connector.A photograph of the prototyped antenna is shown in Figure 1c.

On-Body Antenna Performances
In this section the antenna on-body performances are investigated for two different body locations: the footwear toe-cap and the wrist.The body model consists of voxel files representing the wrist and the foot.In the wrist model case the distance between the antenna and the body is equal to 5 mm.For the footwear case the antenna is located next to the skin voxels.The voxel model of the foot is non-planar, so the distance between the antenna and the foot varies from 1 mm to 8.5 mm.The foot and wrist models include different body tissues, such as skin, fat, muscle and bone.The electrical properties of these materials are frequency dependent [19].
The antenna located on the simulated voxel model and the electrical properties of the tissues are shown in Figure 2.  Small disagreements between simulation and measurement are due to differences between the voxel model shape and the actual human case.The antenna was perfectly centered on the wrist with human body tissue equally distributed below the antenna.The loading of the toes in the footwear case is not symmetrical due to the presence of air-spaces and the non-constant antenna-foot separation.The simulated radiation patterns are shown in Figures 4 and 5.The realized gain as a function of frequency is summarized in Table 2.The antenna radiation efficiency increases with frequency because the electrical distance between the antenna and the body increases.The difference in the shapes of the radiation pattern for the footwear and the wrist locations is due to dissimilar body geometries and to the different positions of the antenna respect to the body.The antenna is characterized by the maximum realized gain for the 3.95 GHz frequency for the wrist case.Considering a walking subject, the 3 dB beamwidth for φ = 90° for the toe-cap mounted antenna is wide enough to cover the arm swing of the walking subject.

Measurements
The S 21 was measured using a Rohde & Schwarz ZVA 25 for a subject standing and walking.The measurements are made in a room 8.1 × 7.9 m 2 with furniture and reinforced concrete walls and floors.The person is walking along one side of the room as shown in Figure 6a.The first antenna is located on the right-side shoe toe-cap and the second antenna is located above the right wrist, as shown in Figure 7. Three different frequency bands are analyzed as shown in Figure 6b: The three frequencies represent the centre frequencies for the narrowband and UWB physical layer for wireless BAN networks in IEEE 802.15.6.To avoid obstruction of the cables by the subject walking, the VNA was placed at the side of the room and the cables located behind the subject.In this way the cables trail the walking subject, without impacting on the gait.Photos of the measurement setup are shown in Figure 8.In total there are five measurements with 330 frequency sweep samples for a subject walking and standing.The first 10 s are related to a stationary subject at one side of the room.Then the subject walks to the other side of the room.Finally the subject stands still at the other side of the room.There is a measurement every ~100 ms.The total time for each measurement is ~33 s.The measurements were made on a subject of mass 70 kg and 1.75 m tall.Path loss results are displayed in terms of Cumulative Distribution Function (CDF) and compared with the Rician distribution using the Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE) criteria.

Narrowband Channel-2.45 GHz
In this paragraph the results for the 2.45 GHz narrowband channel is investigated.The link channel measured in the five campaigns of measurements as a function of time is shown in Figure 9a.For the first 10 s, the variation in the channel is small (between −59 dB and −50 dB).When the subject starts walking the S 21 oscillation increases, but remaining between −67.8 dB and −48 dB.Finally the subject is standing in front of a wall, and the S 21 is almost constant for each set of measurements.The CDF of the five measurements is shown in Figure 9b.The minimum and the maximum values of the five measurements are summarized in Table 3. Considering all the measurements, the maximum range is equal to 19 dB.The CDF is compared with the MLE for the corresponding Rician Distribution, assuming that there is a main ray between the foot and the wrist.The K-factor of the Rician distribution is summarized in Table 3.All the measurements are characterized by a K-factor always greater than 7.5 dB, evidencing the presence of a main component of the received signal greater than the scattered components.The range of K-factors spans from 7.5 dB to 10.5 dB.The path loss is always smaller than 67 dB.

Lower UWB Channel 3.95 GHz
In this section the results of the lower UWB channel are shown.The investigated centre frequency is 3.95 GHz with 500 MHz bandwidth.The S 21 measurements of a walking subject as a function of the  The CDF distributions for the measurements are very similar.Table 4 summarizes the minimum and maximum values and the K-factor for the corresponding Rician distribution.The K-factor for the 3.95 GHz frequency range is always greater than 16.2, corresponding to a more directive link between the footwear and the wrist compared to the 2.45 GHz case.This is also due to a greater antenna realized gain compared to the 2.45 GHz case.The increased bandwidth decreases the fading, reducing the maximum path loss variation to 4 dB.The greater K-factor compared to the narrowband channel can also be explained by the smaller antenna beamwidth, reducing reflected signals from the surrounding environment.

Upper UWB Channel 7.25 GHz
The performance for the upper UWB band is also investigated.The centre frequency is 7.25 GHz with a 500 MHz bandwidth.In Figure 11a 5.The K-factor is greater than the previous case and always greater than 20.9 dB.The difference between the maximum and the minimum K-factor is equal to 5.1 dB.As expected, the K-factor is greater than the previous cases.Although the maximum realized gain is less than the 3.95 GHz case, the beamwidth of the antenna is smaller, resulting in a decreased signal scattering in the surrounding environment.The minimum path loss values are similar to the 3.95 GHz because of the greater realized gain for the footwear antenna.

Conclusions
The S 21 link between the wrist and footwear toe-cap is reported for a subject standing and walking.A monopole antenna is optimized for different on-body locations at 2.45 GHz, 3.95 GHz and 7.25 GHz.The results are summarized in terms of Cumulative Distribution Functions and the Maximum Likelihood Estimation criteria are used for K-factor parameter fit to a Rician distribution.
In the subject standing pose, the S 21 remains persistent for each of the three frequencies.When the subject is walking, the S 21 varies rapidly with lower S 21 values for lower frequencies.This is attributed to channel fading and shadowing by the hand during the arm swing motion associated with walking.At the lower frequency, the fading is more noticeable because the selected channel is narrowband.
The UWB channels are an easier fit to a Rician distribution, with small changes of the K-factor.In the 2.45 GHz case, the Rician K-factor is ~10 dB lower than that for the UWB channels.This is due to the larger beamwidth at 2.45 GHz which increases the signal scattering from surrounding environment.The minimum path loss for each of the UWB channels is the same due to higher antenna efficiency.The 7.25 GHz channel is characterized by the largest K-factor due to its smaller beamwidth.The communication link complies with the standard for each of the measured cases for a subject standing and walking.
Further work will consider the receiving node in different body locations; hence it will establish the optimum frequency band for different body locations.The antenna will be tested in an outdoor environment and with different transceivers to mitigate cable effects.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.(a) Antenna geometry; (b) comparison of simulated and measured S 11 for the antenna in free space; (c) photo of the prototyped antenna.

Figure 3 .
Figure 3.Comparison of measured and simulated S 11 for wrist (a) and footwear (b).

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.(a) Layout of the room; (b) investigated frequencies with bandwidth.

Figure 7 .
Figure 7. Walking subject with antennas on wrist and toe-cap footwear.

Figure 8 .
Figure 8. Photos of the on-body antennas.

Figure 9 .
Figure 9. (a) measured S 21 for a subject walking; (b) CDF of the path loss for the five cases.
shown in Figure10a.The S 21 is almost constant for the stationary subject at the starting point and in front of the wall.When the subject is walking the S 21 oscillates with a greater range of values, with peaks of maximum S 21 equal to −51.89 dB and minima of −57.23 dB.The CDF of the five measurements is shown in Figure10b.

Figure 10 .
Figure 10.(a) Measured S 21 for a walking subject; (b) CDF of the path loss for the five cases.
the measured S 21 for the walking subject as a function of time are shown.As observed for previous cases, the S 21 is almost constant for the first 10 s, with a S 21 value equal to ~−53.5 dB.When the subject is walking, the S 21 range remains between −54.22 dB and −51.56 dB.Finally when the subject is stationary at the end of the room the S 21 is almost constant and to −53.75 dB.The CDFs of the five measurements are shown in Figure 11b.In this case the measurements are much closer to each other.The measured path loss values and K-factors are summarized in Table

Figure 11 .
Figure 11.(a) Measured S 21 for a walking subject; (b) CDF of the path loss for the five cases.

Table 1 .
Parameters value of the spline.

Table 2 .
Directivity parameters for the on-body antennas.

Table 3 .
K-factor estimation for the different measurements for the 2.45 GHz channel.

Table 4 .
K-factor estimation for the different measurements for the 3.95 GHz channel.

Table 5 .
K-factor estimation for the different measurements for the 7.25 GHz channel.