Full Simulation

A PAN receiver essentially measures the modulation of the electric field in the vicinity of the body. As the electric field lines are necessarily perpendicular to the surface of the body (a conductor), the best geometries place one electrode close to the body and the other the maximal reasonable distance away from the body perpendicular to the bodies surface.

The essential tradeoff for signal strength lies in the relative coupling of the ground electrode to the ground, and to the body. When the electrodes are directly between the body and ground, as in the receiver in configuration <#326#>A<#326#> in Figure #pangeom#327>, the ground electrode is better coupled to the body than it is to the ground. In geometries such as those in configuration <#328#>B<#328#>, however, the coupling of the ground electrode to ground (#tex2html_wrap_inline1344#) gets weaker and weaker as it is moved up the body, while the ground electrode to body coupling (#tex2html_wrap_inline1346#) stays nearly the same.

#figure331#
Figure 6-1: Simplified View of PAN

#table338#
Table 6.1: Simulation results at various receiver heights

In the simplified version of PAN shown in Figure #pansimple#352>, the relationship between changes in height of the receiver and the values of #tex2html_wrap_inline1354# and #tex2html_wrap_inline1356#, the above mentioned capacitances, and #tex2html_wrap_inline1358#, the coefficient corresponding to the number of millivolts at the receiver per volt at the transmitter, are fundamental to understanding the geometry constraints of PAN.

The results of a full simulation with various receiver heights appear in Table #tableheights#355>. The simulation was done with a 170cm high, 40cm radius cylinder approximating a person. The transmit electrodes were beneath the person and the receive were beside them at various heights.

#figure356#
Figure 6-2: Signal Strength vs. Receiver Height

As seen in Figure #graphsig#363>, receiver voltage changes linearly with height. The curving of the line at the beginning and end of graph are due to edge effects near the persons feet and head.

A foot to foot configuration is far better, with a value of #tex2html_wrap_inline1360# on the order of #tex2html_wrap_inline1362#.