Introduction

This thesis primarily deals with calculation of a channel capacity for the human body in the context of the PAN system as developed by Tom Zimmerman and Neil Gershenfeld. A brief description of the system will be provided here, and a more thorough discussion is in [#tzpan##1#] and [#tomthesis##1#].

#figure30#
Figure 1-1: Typical PAN Geometries

PAN, or Personal Area Network is a system for data transmission through the human body. Each of the transmitter and receiver is configured with two electrodes. One of these electrodes is in a geometry which is more strongly capacitively coupled to the body than to the ground. The other electrode is less strongly coupled to the body and more so to absolute (room) ground. In all points of a PAN transmission, capacitive coupling dominates. In experimental work, typical transmission voltages were fives or tens of volts.

Two typical geometries for PAN are shown in Figure ~#pangeom#37>. In <#38#>A<#38#>, the first receiver electrode is nearly in contact with the bottom of the foot and the second electrode is nearly in contact with the ground. This provides the desired symmetry breaking about as ideally as possible for the human body. In <#39#>B<#39#>, the first receiver electrode is in near contact with the body and the second electrode is somewhat further from he body, and hence less well coupled to the body, and with a slightly stronger ground coupling. This configuration is less than ideal (as will be shown in more mathematical rigor later), however is a usable arrangement. For both configurations shown, the transmitter is beneath the foot, as for the receiver in <#40#>A<#40#>.