Module III Session I
Module III Session I
Session 1
Internet of Things - ITU Definition
Physical things
Exist in the physical world and are
capable of being sensed, actuated
and connected.
Examples: industrial robots, goods
and electrical equipment.
Virtual things
Exist in the information world and
are capable of being stored,
processed and accessed.
Examples: Multimedia content,
application software.
➢ Allows
▪ To create the low-power, wide-area sensor and/or actuator network (WASN)
systems for Machine Type Communications (MTC), Smart cities and Ubiquitous
Sensor Networks (USN) applications.
➢ Contributes
▪ To socio economic development such as in Agriculture, health sector and many
more.
➢ Efficient Management
▪ Manage utilities efficiently such as smart power, water grids, and transport
3
management
Characteristics (IoT v/s Cellular)
➢ IoT communications are or should be:
▪ Low cost,
▪ Low power,
▪ Long battery duration,
▪ High number of connections,
▪ Different bitrate requirement,
▪ Long range,
▪ Low processing capacity,
▪ Low storage capacity,
▪ Small size devices,
▪ Simple network architecture and protocols
Internet of Things
Wireless Technologies
Diversity of IoT application requirements:
Varying bandwidth requirements (how much information is sent)
Long-range vs short-range
Long battery life
Various QoS requirements
IoTs and cloud technologies and are the two unstoppable forces promoting digital capabilities
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IoT Connectivity Options
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Source: ITU Workshop on Spectrum Management for Internet of Things Deployment, 22 November 2016, Geneva
IoT: General Architecture
Cloud Storage
Intelligence and Analytics
Cellular
Wireless
Short Range
Industry GTW
Sensors, actuators Wired
Consumer GTW
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Spectrum Needs of IoT
Information
Processing
Network
Infrastructure
Sensing and
Identification
IoT: Refernce Model In IoT
supporting Fog
solutions
Com
putting (FC) part of the
application processing is
executed directly at IoT
objects and only when
needed. More complex
and resource-
consuming tasks are
transferred to higher
level units (FC units) or
directly to the cloud.
IoT Technical Solutions
monitors TV VCR
sensors DVD/CD
automati INDUSTRIAL & CONSUMER Remote
on COMMERCIAL ELECTRONICS control
control
ZigBee
monitors LOW DATA-RATE mouse
diagnosti PERSONAL
RADIO DEVICES PC & keyboard
cs HEALTH CARE PERIPHERALS joystick
sensors
security
consoles
HVAC
portables TOYS & HOME
lighting
educationa GAMES AUTOMATION
closures
l
ZigBee and Bluetooth Low Energy
• Business comparison:
– ZigBee is older. It has gone through some iterations
– ZigBee has market mindshare, but not a lot of shipments yet.
– Market barriers: connectivity – ZigBee is not in PCs or mobile phones yet.
• Technical comparison:
– Zigbee is low power; Bluetooth LE is even lower. Detailed analysis depends on specific
applications and design detail, no to mention chip geometry.
– ZigBee stack is light; the Bluetooth LE/GATT stack is even simpler
• Going forward:
– ZigBee has a lead on developing applications and presence
– Bluetooth low energy has improved technology, and a commanding presence in several existing
markets: mobile phones, automobiles, consumer electronics, PC industry
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– Replacing “classic Bluetooth ” with “dual mode” devices will bootstrap this market quickly
ZigBee and Bluetooth Comparison
Bluetooth ACL/HS x Y Y x x
Bluetooth
Y x x x x
SCO/eSCO
Bluetooth low
x x x x Y
energy
Wi-Fi (VoIP) Y Y Y x
Wi-Fi Direct Y Y Y x x
ZigBee x x x x Y
ANT x x x x Y
Low Power
WiFi HaLow
2010
➢ Modulation: a version of Chirp Spread Spectrum (CSS) with a typical channel bandwidth of
125KHz
➢ Long range: up to 15 Km
➢ Strong indoor penetration: With High Spreading Factor, Up to 20dB penetration (deep indoor)
➢ Robust Occupies the entire bandwidth of the channel to broadcast a signal, making it robust to
channel noise
End Device
Cloud LoRa
Gateway
Email
End Device LoRa Network
Gateway Server Application
Server
Customer IT
C Modules with a
• Fleet management
Module always strong reception Adapted to modules on the
(« continuous »)
listening latency grid • Real Time Traffic
constraint (less or with no power Management
than one second) constraints
Mar 2017
2012 2013 2014 2016
60 countries
First fundraising All France San-Francisco 42 covered by
Launch of the of Sigfox territory is become the first US. countries, the end of
Sigfox company to covered by Sigfox State covered by
network 1000 2018
cover France network Sigfox customers
Sigfox – Overview
➢ First LPWAN Technology (BPSK based transmission)
➢ The physical layer based on an Ultra-Narrow band wireless modulation
➢ Proprietary system
➢ Low throughput ( ~100 bps)
➢ Low power
➢ Extended range (up to 50 km)
➢ 140 messages/day/device
➢ Subscription-based model
➢ Cloud platform with Sigfox –defined API for server access
➢ Roaming capability
➢ Takes very narrow parts of spectrum and changes the phase of the
carrier radio wave to encode the data
Sigfox - Architecture
Frequency Band Ultra Narrow Band
Range ~ 13 Km
End Device
Throughput ~ 100 bps
End Device
Cloud Sigfox
Gateway
Email
End Device
Sigfox
Gateway Network
Server
Customer IT
Type of Traffic Data packet
End Device
Payload ~ 12 Bytes
Security No security
Remote
Time on air Up to 6 seconds Monitoring
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Weightless - Overview
➢ Easy Deployment
➢ Coverage upto 11 Km
End Email
Device
New
baseband Customer
Software IT
for LTE-M
End
Device Enhancement for LTE-M Remote
Monitoring
LTE-M
➢ Licensed Spectrum
• Independently
• In unused 200-kHz bands that have previously been used for GSM
(Global System for Mobile Communications)
• On LTE base stations allocating a resource block to NB-IoT
operations or in their guard bands.
NB-IoT
➢ Uses LTE design extensively e.g. DL: FDMA, UL: SC-FDMA
➢ Lower cost than eMTC (Narrow band: supports 180 KHz channel)
➢ Extended coverage: 164 dB maximum coupling loss or link budget (at least for
standalone) in comparison to GPRS link budget of 144dB and LTE of 142.7 dB
➢ Low Receiver sensitivity = -141 dBm
➢ Long battery life: 10 years with 5 Watt Hour battery (depending on traffic and
coverage needs)
➢ Support for massive number of devices: at least 50.000 per cell
➢ 3 modes of operation:
▪ Stand-alone: stand-alone carrier, e.g. spectrum currently used by GERAN (GSM Edge Radio Access
Network) systems as a replacement of one or more GSM carriers
▪ Guard band: unused resource blocks within a LTE carrier’s guard-band
▪ In-band: resource blocks within a normal LTE carrier
NB-IoT – Use cases
NB-IoT - Architecture
Frequency Band Ultra Narrow Band HD-FDD
p/2 BPSK, p/4 QPSK Class
Range ~ 11 Km
3 (23 dBm) Class 5 (20
Throughput ~ 150 Kbps dBm)
LTE Access
End Device
Remote
Monitoring
NB-IoT - Architecture
• Architecture is based on evolved Packet Core (EPC) used by LTE
• Cellular IoT User Equipment (CIoT UE) is the mobile terminal
• evolved UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network (E-UTRAN) handles
the radio communications between the UE and the EPC, and consists of
the evolved base stations called eNodeB or eNB
• NB-IoT security properties
• Authentication and core network signaling security as in normal LTE
• Security supporting optimized transmission of user data
• Encrypted and integrity protected user data can be sent within NAS
signaling.
• Minimized signaling to resume cached user plane security context in
the radio network.
NB-IoT – Spectrum & Access
Designed with a
number of deployment
options for licensed
GSM , WCDMA or LTE
spectrum to achieve
efficiency
Stand-alone operation
Dedicated spectrum.
Ex.: By re-farming GSM channels
In-band operation
Using resource blocks within a normal
LTE carrier