Advice for wearable bluetooth antenna

Hello,

We are currently developing a second version of a wearable BLE device and would like some advice about the antenna design. Our device is meant to be worn in the middle of the chest and this gives a lot of challenges for connectivity. We have experienced a lot of connection issues from the human body absorbing a lot of the radio waves and would like advice on how we should design our antenna. For a ballpark estimate we are hoping for around 200Kbps at 20 feet in all directions (especially when the human body is between our device and the phone). Previously we have used a trace antenna but since our board needs to be directly contacting the skin we weren't able to get a good connection with it. We are not sure if we should go with a chip antenna or put a coax port and attach a FPC antenna (we can place it max 15mm away from the skin in our enclosure). We are also looking into adding a nRF21540 which we are hoping will also increase the range. Any advice or feedback on if this is realistic will be much appreciated. 

Thank you for your help.

Parents
  • This isn't really an answer to your question, but hopefully it can help some.

    If you don't get all the advice you need here, antenna manufacturers will provide a ton of help in picking out the right antenna and even suggest how they could make an antenna that is custom for your application (given that you are planning to produce in high enough volume). Most suppliers will also test your device in an enclosure and tune the pi circuits on your board for impedance matching etc.

    I've had very good experience with Pulse.

Reply
  • This isn't really an answer to your question, but hopefully it can help some.

    If you don't get all the advice you need here, antenna manufacturers will provide a ton of help in picking out the right antenna and even suggest how they could make an antenna that is custom for your application (given that you are planning to produce in high enough volume). Most suppliers will also test your device in an enclosure and tune the pi circuits on your board for impedance matching etc.

    I've had very good experience with Pulse.

Children
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