Characterization of the Fat Channel for Intra-Body Communication at R-Band Frequencies.
Noor Badariah AsanEmadeldeen HassanJacob Velander Syaiful Redzwan Mohd ShahDaniel NorelandTaco J BlokhuisEddie WadbroMartin BerggrenThiemo VoigtRobin AugustinePublished in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2018)
In this paper, we investigate the use of fat tissue as a communication channel between in-body, implanted devices at R-band frequencies (1.7⁻2.6 GHz). The proposed fat channel is based on an anatomical model of the human body. We propose a novel probe that is optimized to efficiently radiate the R-band frequencies into the fat tissue. We use our probe to evaluate the path loss of the fat channel by studying the channel transmission coefficient over the R-band frequencies. We conduct extensive simulation studies and validate our results by experimentation on phantom and ex-vivo porcine tissue, with good agreement between simulations and experiments. We demonstrate a performance comparison between the fat channel and similar waveguide structures. Our characterization of the fat channel reveals propagation path loss of ∼0.7 dB and ∼1.9 dB per cm for phantom and ex-vivo porcine tissue, respectively. These results demonstrate that fat tissue can be used as a communication channel for high data rate intra-body networks.