1. Introduction
Textile architectures with embedded antennas have turned out to be an integral part of wearable device systems, enabling body-centric wireless communication with garments [
1]. Wearable device systems can be (others are possible as well) monitoring systems dedicated to assisted living and lifecare. If these monitoring systems are integrated into textile clothing, they become wearable textile systems [
2]. An antenna is a part of a monitoring system responsible for wireless communication [
3]. Athletes, mountaineers, miners, military, rescuers, firefighters, and many other outdoor users need healthcare and navigation information to be transferred wirelessly to a base station to monitor their health conditions. In hospitals, patients whose life is at risk need to be monitored within safe zones every time. Body-centric devices attached to the garment of patients can notify doctors and nursing personnel wirelessly about their health condition, which helps them to look after their patients more effectively and take immediate action if needed. Effective information transmission can be achieved through antennas embedded into garments, termed wearable antennas [
3,
4]. Textile patch antennas, among a wide range of different types of antennas, are the most popular antenna topology for wearable applications. Their planar structure, simple design, flexibility, low weight, and ease of integration into any garment make these antennas suitable for wearable applications [
5]. A Microstrip Patch Antenna (MPA) design includes a non-conductive textile substrate, also called the dielectric substrate, sandwiched between the conductive patch and the conductive ground plane. Furthermore, the presence of a conductive ground plane layer negates any adverse effect on the human skin due to the back radiation of an antenna [
5,
6].
Physical factors such as bending [
7], stretching [
8,
9,
10,
11] and temperature [
12,
13] tend to shift the resonance frequency of an antenna. Because of the hydrophilic character of textiles, textile antennas are affected more by humidity compared to non-textile-based antennas such as FR4, RT/Duroid and hydrophobic foam. Textile materials used as an antenna substrate may transport humidity between the body and the atmosphere and absorb part of it. Water has a high relative permittivity (Ɛ
r = 78) and, in comparison, the relative permittivity of dry textile substrates ranges between 1 and 2 [
14]. When the humidity is absorbed by the textile substrate, the relative permittivity of the textile substrate increases due to the high permittivity of water together with its high conductivity, which results in the shift of the resonance frequency of the textile antenna towards the lower side [
15,
16]. The amount of absorbed humidity depends upon atmospheric temperature, moisture content and moisture regain of the textile material used to construct the textile antenna. To combat the adverse effect of humidity on the performance of a textile antenna during its wearability, the selected textile substrate should be hydrophobic or has the least moisture uptake ability and should have the ability to transport the humidity effectively to the environment. However, the hydrophobic nature of the textile substrate may cause an uncomfortable feeling to the wearer because no humidity will be absorbed by the textile substrate and the humidity will remain trapped underneath the antenna. Therefore, the high water vapor permeability (WVP) would be a solution to prevent the accumulation of humidity underneath and inside the textile antenna.
A breathable textile antenna can be an essential substitute to conventional textile antennas and can cope with the above-mentioned working strains more effectively. The breathability is a factor of porosity, the higher the porosity of materials used to construct an antenna, the more an antenna becomes breathable [
17]. The high air permeability (AP) of textiles can effectively dissipate humidity back into the environment [
18,
19]. A breathable textile antenna can also be effective in providing ease to the wearer at a time when the wearer performs any physical activity. In [
20], the porous patch antenna is constructed through screen printing of conductive silver ink on a highly absorbent engineered Evolon
® textile substrate to help the silver ink to penetrate evenly over its surface through a strong capillary wicking force. The antenna, later on, is packaged with a porous polyurethane web as an additional process to make the antenna durable, breathable, and water repellent, which is an additional, delicate and expensive step to avoid the effect of humidity over the textile antenna. Previous literature on wearable textile antennas so far has been limited to a number of discrete properties like dual-band antenna [
21,
22,
23,
24], bending effect on the resonance frequency of the antenna [
25,
26], usage of novel conductive electrotextile fabrics to construct textile patch antennas [
27], and comparison of different textile properties [
28]. Another important aspect is the physical performance of the wearer of a textile antenna, which can be affected if a textile antenna, despite its relatively small size, resists the transportation of humidity and/or perspiration and remain trapped inside a textile antenna can be uncomfortable even to a little extent for the wearer. This is particularly the case when high-intensity activities are performed with large sweat production as a consequence. The perspiration also affects the electrical properties and the dimensional stability of the textiles [
12,
15]. The height of the textile substrate changes as the perspiration swells the textile substrate. If the change in the height of the textile substrate occurs, the antenna will no more resonate at the desired frequency. Some textile fabrics shrink more and some less when they make contact with water, which means they change their physical dimensions when exposed to water. Therefore, a textile substrate with low values of moisture regain and moisture content may overcome the change of dimensional stability issue.
A microstrip patch antenna (MPA) has a relatively smaller bandwidth, hence some special techniques have been followed to increase the bandwidth of the antenna. One technique is to cut a rectangular patch from the center of the MPA [
29,
30], which results in a rectangular ring microstrip patch antenna (RRMPA). In this study, the RRMPA topology has been selected as illustrated in
Figure 1. This research demonstrates a novel approach of constructing a breathable perforated textile antenna through added perforations in the conducting elements of RRMPA, which improves its WVP so that the humidity under and inside the antenna substrate can be effectively transported back to the environment. To validate the approach, this paper follows a number of basic steps to develop a breathable textile antenna, employing a highly perforated 3-dimensional (3D) knitted spacer fabric as the textile substrate (perforations are added during the knitting process) and the conductive layers (the ground plane and the patch) with regular perforations/holes (added through laser cutting during the construction of the textile antenna). All the antenna prototypes are designed to resonate at the Industrial, Scientific, and Medical (ISM) frequency band ranges from 2.4 GHz to 2.4835 GHz, which covers 83.5 MHz of bandwidth. It should be noted that an extra benefit of an RRPMA is that the ring structure creates a hole within the antenna patch, allowing more air and water vapors to pass through the antenna, which helps to enhance the breathability of the antenna.
5. Conclusions
Breathable textile RRMPAs for wearable applications were successfully designed and implemented. Enhanced breathability was observed when a large number of small-sized holes of 1 mm diameter in the conductive fabrics of RRMPAs were inserted. The simulation tool used in previous research was expanded by adding the perforations. Validation has shown the software tool can predict the behavior of the perforated antenna with sufficient accuracy. Simulations showed adding perforations did not impede the antenna which remained effective at a resonance frequency of 2.45 GHz (ISM band). Experiments confirmed this conclusion for all three different conductive fabrics tested. Every constructed and measured breathable textile RRMPA succeeded in combining enhanced breathability with sufficient antenna gain.
Out of all antenna prototypes studied, the Koln-based breathable perforated antenna prototype showed the most promising results, with a WVTR of 5296.70 g/m2/day, and a realized gain of 4.2 dBi and 5.4 dBi at E-plane and H-plane, respectively. In contrast, the Prag-based non-perforated RRMPA was the least air-permeable antenna, with a WVTR of 3707.42 g/m2/day of WVTR, and gains of 5.8 dBi and 3.3 dBi in the E-plane and H-plane, respectively. Thanks to the enhanced breathability of the proposed textile antenna, the effects of wetting caused by for instance sweating are minimized to a great extent as the humidity is transported much faster than in the standard textile antennas.
The antennas developed in this research consisted of a 3D knitted hydrophobic spacer fabric as an antenna substrate combined with laminated copper-coated polyamide electro textiles in which a regular pattern of small holes was cut. This novel approach successfully enables the creation of breathable textile antennas that offer all properties needed for textile use, flexibility, breathability and robustness, without losing the required antenna gain for use in the ISM band. The antenna leads to enhanced wear comfort sensation. It covers the entire 2.45 GHz ISM band with sufficient extra margin to allow for some tolerances in the production.