SPETLGMay 15, 2024

An Initial Study of Human-Scale Blockage in sub-THz Radio Propagation with Application to Indoor Passive Localization

arXiv:2406.16894v11 citationsh-index: 20APWC
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This study addresses the problem of device-free indoor passive localization for applications like RF sensing, though it is preliminary and incremental.

The paper empirically investigates human body blockage effects in sub-THz bands (75-110 GHz and 170-260 GHz) for indoor radio propagation, finding that discrimination of blockage micro-movements is possible with higher precision compared to classical RF sensing at cm-scale wavelengths.

This paper empirically investigates the body induced electromagnetic (EM) effects, namely the human body blockage, by conducting indoor measurement campaigns in the unexplored sub-THz W-band (75-110 GHz) and G-band (170-260 GHz). The proposed analysis focuses on both the alterations of channel frequency response induced by body presence, fully or partially obstructing the line-of-sight (LoS) between transmitter and recevier, as well as on the channel impulse response (CIR) for selected movements of the target, i.e. crossing the LoS of the radio link. Modelling of large scale parameters is also presented using a phantom body object. The proposed study has applications in device-free radio localization and radio frequency (RF) sensing scenarios where the EM radiation or environmental radio signals are collected and processed to detect and locate people without requiring them to wear any electronic devices. Although preliminary, the study reveals that discrimination of the blockage micro-movements is possible, achieving higher precision compared to classical RF sensing and localization using cm-scale wavelengths (2.4-6GHz bands).

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