The main bottleneck to achieve energy autonomy in body area networks (BAN) is the design of an ultra low power yet reliable wireless system. In this paper, we first demonstrate the feasibility of an ultra low power receiver by presenting our implemented receiver chip that could operate on a total power of 479.5 uW, which is more than one order of magnitude lower than commercially available low power transceivers working at 2.4 GHz. We then show the reliability of this chip, which can achieve a receiver sensitivity of -72 dBm for a data rate of 1 Mbps. We further demonstrate that this receiver sensitivity is sufficient to guarantee reliability by evaluating this chip in different to-body communication in BAN environments. By using typical BA...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...
The main bottleneck to achieve energy autonomy in body area networks (BAN) is the design of an ultra...
The main bottleneck to achieve energy autonomy in body area networks (BAN) is the design of an ultra...
The main bottleneck to achieve energy autonomy in body area networks (BAN) is the design of an ultra...
This book describes the design of ultra low power transceivers for body area networks. Since these ...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
A major constraint in the design of wireless body area networks (BAN) and sensor networks is battery...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...
The main bottleneck to achieve energy autonomy in body area networks (BAN) is the design of an ultra...
The main bottleneck to achieve energy autonomy in body area networks (BAN) is the design of an ultra...
The main bottleneck to achieve energy autonomy in body area networks (BAN) is the design of an ultra...
This book describes the design of ultra low power transceivers for body area networks. Since these ...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
This paper presents a multistandard ultra-low-power (ULP) 2.36/2.4GHz transceiver for personal and b...
A major constraint in the design of wireless body area networks (BAN) and sensor networks is battery...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...
In this paper we present an ultra-low-power receiver geared towards body area networks (BAN). The pr...