The next generation of communications systems could be built with a sewing machine. Ohio State University researchers have discovered ways to incorporate radio antennas directly into clothing, using plastic film and metallic thread. In a recent issue of the journal IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters, the researchers reported a new antenna design worn on the body, with a range four times larger than that of a conventional antenna.
“Our primary goal is to improve communications reliability and the mobility of soldiers,” said Chi-Chih Chen, a research associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Ohio State. “But the same technology could work for police officers, fire fighters and astronauts—anyone who needs to keep their hands free for important work.”
For foot soldiers, mobility and communications are often at odds. An antenna can be a large and unwieldy addition to an already heavy load. The idea of embedding communications devices in clothing to address this problem is not new, Chen explained. The Ohio State system takes elements from previous research and combines them in a new way, adding a unique computer control device that lets multiple antennas work together in a single piece of clothing. The result is a communications system that can send and receive signals in all directions, even through walls and inside a building, without the need for the wearer to carry an external antenna.
John Volakis, the Roy & Lois Chope Chair Professor and director of the ElectroScience Laboratory at Ohio State, found a common analogy for the new design. “In a way, we're doing what's already been done on cellphones. You don't see cellphones with external antennas anymore, because the antenna is part of the body of the phone,” Volakis said.