Indoor Off-Body Wireless Communication: Static Beamforming versus Space-Time Coding
Author(s) -
Patrick Van Torre,
Maria Lucia Scarpello,
Luigi Vallozzi,
Hendrik Rogier,
Marc Moeneclaey,
Dries Vande Ginste,
Jo Verhaevert
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of antennas and propagation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.282
H-Index - 37
eISSN - 1687-5877
pISSN - 1687-5869
DOI - 10.1155/2012/413683
Subject(s) - beamforming , antenna diversity , array gain , computer science , electronic engineering , diversity gain , transmission (telecommunications) , coding (social sciences) , antenna array , wireless , telecommunications , antenna (radio) , acoustics , engineering , mimo , physics , mathematics , statistics
The performance of beamforming versus space-time coding using a body-worn textile antenna array is experimentally evaluated for an indoor environment, where a walking rescue worker transmits data in the 2.45 GHz ISM band, relying on a vertical textile four-antenna array integrated into his garment. The two transmission scenarios considered are static beamforming at low-elevation angles and space-time code based transmit diversity. Signals are received by a base station equipped with a horizontal array of four dipole antennas providing spatial receive diversity through maximum-ratio combining. Signal-to-noise ratios, bit error rate characteristics, and signal correlation properties are assessed for both off-body transmission scenarios. Without receiver diversity, the performance of space-time coding is generally better. In case of fourth-order receiver diversity, beamforming is superior in line-of-sight conditions. For non-line-of-sight propagation, the space-time codes perform better as soon as bit error rates are low enough for a reliable data link
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