| Literature DB >> 29880784 |
Matteo Ridolfi1, Samuel Van de Velde2, Heidi Steendam3, Eli De Poorter4.
Abstract
Radio frequency (RF) technologies are often used to track assets in indoor environments. Among others, ultra-wideband (UWB) has constantly gained interest thanks to its capability to obtain typical errors of 30 cm or lower, making it more accurate than other wireless technologies such as WiFi, which normally can predict the location with several meters accuracy. However, mainly due to technical requirements that are part of the standard, conventional medium access strategies such as clear channel assessment, are not straightforward to implement. Since most scientific papers focus on UWB accuracy improvements of a single user, it is not clear to which extend this limitation and other design choices impact the scalability of UWB indoor positioning systems. We investigated the scalability of indoor localization solutions, to prove that UWB can be used when hundreds of tags are active in the same system. This paper provides mathematical models that calculate the theoretical supported user density for multiple localization approaches, namely Time Difference of Arrival (TDoA) and Two-Way Ranging (TWR) with different MAC protocol combinations, i.e., ALOHA and TDMA. Moreover, this paper applies these formulas to a number of realistic UWB configurations to study the impact of different UWB schemes and settings. When applied to the 802.15.4a compliant Decawave DW1000 chip, the scalability dramatically degrades if the system operates with uncoordinated protocols and two-way communication schemes. In the best case scenario, UWB DW1000 chips can actively support up to 6171 tags in a single domain cell (no handover) with well-selected settings and choices, i.e., when adopting the combination of TDoA (one-way link) and TDMA. As a consequence, UWB can be used to simultaneously localize thousands of nodes in a dense network. However, we also show that the number of supported devices varies greatly depending on the MAC and PHY configuration choices.Entities:
Keywords: ALOHA; Decawave DW1000; IPS; TDMA; TDoA; TWR; UWB; scalability; user density
Year: 2018 PMID: 29880784 PMCID: PMC6022048 DOI: 10.3390/s18061875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Related work overview.
| Solution | Approach | User Density | Other Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subramanian and Lim, 2005 [ | RSSI distributed localization | 200 tags | Results of simulation |
| Khun et al.; 2011 [ | TDoA | 30 tags | Real life experiments with TDMA protocol |
| Kolakpwski and Djaja-Josko, 2016 [ | Hybrid TDoA-TWR | Not evaluated | Improved system accuracy |
| Monica and Ferrari, 2016 [ | TWR | 22 tags | Industrial warehouse |
| OpenRTLS [ | TDoA, TWR | 7500 updates/s | Communication range 20 m |
| Sewio [ | TDoA | 1000 updates/s | Communication range 30 m |
| Be Spoon [ | TDoA, TWR, AoA | 750 updates/s | Office like environment |
| Time Domain [ | TWR | Unknown | Proprietary MAC protocols |
Maximum mean power spectral density (dBm/MHz) for UWB systems.
| Frequency (GHz) | Maximum Mean Power Spectral Density (e.i.r.p.) (dBm/MHz) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| LT1 | LT2 | LEAS | |
| −90 | −90 | −90 | |
| −85 | −85 | −85 | |
| −70 | −70 | −70 | |
| −70 | −70 | −70 | |
| −80 | −41.3 1,2 | −21.3 1 | |
| −70 | −41.3 1,2 | −21.3 1 | |
| −70 | −41.3 1,2 | −41.3 1 | |
| −70 | −70 | −70 | |
| −41.3 | −70 | −70 | |
| −64 | −70 | −70 | |
| −65 | −70 | −70 | |
| −85 | −85 | −85 | |
1 Duty cycle of maximum 5% per second per transmitter on time (). 2 Duty cycle limited to 1.5% per minute per transmitter on time () or an alternative mitigation technique should be used to achieve the same protection. 3 The maximum mean e.i.r.p. spectral density in the band 4.2 GHz to 4.4 GHz for emissions that appear 30° or greater above the horizontal plane should be less than −47.3 dBm/MHz, see clause 4.6.1.4 ECC/REC(11)09.
Maximum peak power (dBm in 50 MHz) for UWB systems.
| Frequency (GHz) | Maximum Peak Power Spectral Density (e.i.r.p.) (dBm in 50 MHz) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| LT1 | LT2 | LEAS | |
| −50 | −50 | −50 | |
| −45 | −45 | −45 | |
| −36 | −36 | −36 | |
| −36 | −36 | −36 | |
| −40 | 0 1,2 | 20 1 | |
| −60 | 0 1,2 | 20 1 | |
| −60 | 0 1,2 | 0 1 | |
| −30 | −30 | −30 | |
| 0 | −30 | −30 | |
| −25 | −70 | −30 | |
| −25 | −30 | −30 | |
| −45 | −45 | −45 | |
1 Duty cycle of maximum 5% per second per transmitter on time (). 2 Duty cycle limited to 1.5% per minute per transmitter on time () or an alternative mitigation technique should be used to achieve the same protection. 3 The maximum mean e.i.r.p. spectral density in the band 4.2 GHz to 4.4 GHz for emissions that appear 30° or greater above the horizontal plane should be less than −47.3 dBm/MHz, see clause 4.6.1.4 ECC/REC(11)09.
Low Duty Cycle (LDC) restrictions for UWB technology.
| Parameters | Restrictions |
|---|---|
| Max transmitter on time | 5 ms |
| Mean transmitter off time | ≥38 ms (averaged over 1 s) |
| Sum transmitter off time | >950 ms per second |
| Sum transmitter on time | <18 s per hour |
Figure 1Time Difference of Arrival Scheme.
Figure 2Two Way ranging Scheme.
TDoA and TWR approaches comparison
| Time Difference of Arrival | Two Way Ranging | |
|---|---|---|
| Anchors | Yes | No |
| Energy Overhead | Low | High |
| Hybrid MAC Protocol | Low | High |
| Position Information | At Infrastructure Side | At Both Sides |
UWB variables: radio, MAC, standard levels.
| Symbol | Variable Name | Unit | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Radio | Frame duration | ms | |
| Synchronization header (SHR) duration | ms | ||
| PHY header (PHR) duration | ms | ||
| PHY service data unit duration | ms | ||
| Preamble length | symbols | ||
| Start of frame delimiter (SFD) length | bits | ||
| Reed Solomon bits | bits | ||
| Data length | bits | ||
| SHR symbols duration | ms | ||
| PHR symbols duration | ms | ||
| Data symbols duration | ms | ||
| Pulse repetition frequency | Hz | ||
| Transmission power | dBm | ||
| Receiver sensitivity | dBm | ||
| Channel number | unitless | ||
| Path loss model | unitless | ||
| MAC | Reply time in TWR | ms | |
| Transmission duration | ms | ||
| Synchronization beacon duration | ms | ||
| Beacon duration | ms | ||
| Contention Access Period (CAP) duration | ms | ||
| Contention Free Period (CFP) duration | ms | ||
| Superframe duration | ms | ||
| Resources available | unitless | ||
| Number of anchors | unitless | ||
| Number of message exchanges | unitless | ||
| Number of supported tags | unitless | ||
| Position update frequency | Hz | ||
| LDC | Transmitter on time | ms | |
| Transmitter off time | ms | ||
| DAA | Power level threshold | dBm | |
| Transmit power of victim system | dBm | ||
| Minimum needed isolation | dBm |
Figure 3Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) time division scheme.
Figure 4System diagram for UWB indoor scalability model.
Figure 5Cell size definition problem.
Figure 6Final step to output the maximum user density achievable (a) Standard constraints (b) MAC protocol (c) localization technique.
DW1000 Symbols duration.
| Data Rate (Mbps) | PRF (MHz) | SHR (ns) | PHR (ns) | Data (ns) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.11 | 16 | 993.59 | 8205.13 | 8205.13 |
| 0.11 | 64 | 1017.63 | 8205.13 | 8205.13 |
| 0.85 | 16 | 993.59 | 1025.64 | 1025.64 |
| 0.85 | 64 | 1017.63 | 1025.64 | 1025.64 |
| 6.81 | 16 | 993.59 | 1025.64 | 128.21 |
| 6.81 | 64 | 1017.63 | 1025.64 | 128.21 |
Figure 7Tag density computed applying the scalability model with two different UWB configurations and two extra reference modes for TDMA w/o synchronization.
Figure 8Tag density in relation to frame length and applied to four different configurations.