Long Range Wireless IoT Technologies:
Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN) vs Cellular
______ Anne-Lena Kampen Trondheim 18th of May 2017
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Long Range Wireless IoT Technologies: Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN) vs Cellular ______ Anne-Lena Kampen Trondheim 18 th of May 2017 Outline Introduction Long Range Wireless IoT Technologies; characteristics Cellular
______ Anne-Lena Kampen Trondheim 18th of May 2017
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– Internet: Worldwide network – Things: Machines, parts of machines, smart meters, sensors.. – Worldwide network of interconnected objects
terms of:
– Delay – Range – Throughput – Reliability
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Computer networks, vol. 54, no. 15, pp. 2787-2805, 2010.
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– 58 million in 2016 – 1 billion by 2021
[1] “Global Mobile Data Traffic Forecast Update, 2016–2021 White Paper”, Cisco Visual Networking Index, Cisco mars 2017, Available, http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/solutions/collateral/service-provider/visual-networking-index-vni/mobile-white-paper-c11-520862.html
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[1] “Low throughput networks (ltn); use cases for low throughput networks,” ETSI GS LTN 001 V1.1.1, September 2014. [Online]. Available: http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi gs/LTN/001 099/001/01.01. 01 60/gs LTN001v010101p.pdf
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– Multihop have unequal and unpredictable energy consumption
– Multihop require dense and expensive deployment of infrastructure
– Long range have lower data rate
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– Low delay – However, high Collison probability
– Reduces collisions – However, in LPWAN a high number of nodes may be ‘hidden nodes’
– Prevents collisions – Less effective for short data packets – Added communication overhead
– Reduces collisions – Increase overhead – Advanced protocols requiring tight synchronization is challenging due to cheep end device oscillators
[1] A. Laya, L. Alonso, and J. Alonso Zarate, "Is the Random Access Channel of LTE and LTE-A Suitable for M2M Communications? A Survey of Alternatives," IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 4-16, 2014.
Time-frequency resources; figure from[1]
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– Downlink only after uplink: End-devise stays awake a limited time after transmission – Scheduled downlink: A node periodically wake up
– 0.1-10 % of the time
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– Some use 2.4GHz – Free of charge – Lower frequency signals experience less attenuation and multipath fading – However, Cross-technology interference
– Licensed frequencies
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Receivers sensitivity is improved by slower modulation rate (slower data rate) Narrowband: (<25kHz)
Spread spectrum techniques
Ultra narrow band (UNB) (100Hz)
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– Cellular network technologies
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– One receive (Rx), one receiver chain. – Reduced peak data rates;1 mbps in downlink and uplink. – Optional half-duplex FDD (Frequency Division Duplex) operation
– High peak-to-average
– Low peak-to-average
[1] R. Ratasuk, A. Prasad, Z. Li, A. Ghosh, and M. A. Uusitalo, "Recent advancements in M2M communications in 4G networks and evolution towards 5G," in Intelligence in Next Generation Networks (ICIN), 2015 18th International Conference on, 2015, pp. 52-57: IEEE. [2] 3GPP online information: http://www.3gpp.org/technologies/keywords-acronyms/98-lte
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– (3GPP Rel.13) [1]
integrated with LTE
– (SC- FDMA) (Single-carrier Frequency Division Multiple Access) – 170 kbps
– Orthogonal FDMA (OFDMA) in downlink, – 250 kbps [2]
Figure from [2] [1] “LTE: Evolved Universal Terrestial Radio Access (E-UTRA); Mediaum Access Control (MAC) protocol specification (3GPP TS 36.321 version 13.2.1 Release 13), available, http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_ts/136300_136399/136321/13.02.00_60/ts_136321v130200p.pdf [2]“LTE evolution for IoT connectivity” Nokia white paper”, Nokia 2017. Available http://resources.alcatel-ucent.com/asset/200178
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– Heterogeneous Networks (HetNets), small cells having low transmission power
– CSMA; adapted for directional antennas [2], – TDMA; spatial reuse enables concurrent transmission
[1]M. Agiwal, A. Roy, and N. Saxena, "Next generation 5G wireless networks: A comprehensive survey," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. 18, no. 3, pp. 1617-1655, 2016. [2] M. X. Gong, D. Akhmetov, R. Want, and S. Mao, "Multi-user operation in mmwave wireless networks," in Communications (ICC), 2011 IEEE International Conference on, 2011, pp. 1-6: IEEE. Figure from [1]
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LTE NB-IoT 5G Link budget 141dB 164dB Output power 23dBm 23dBm BW 20Mhz 180kHz Data rate 1mbps UL & DL 250 kbps UL 170 kbps DL 10Gbps Power saving mode X X X
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– CSS (Chirp Spread Spectrum) – The data rate ranges from 300 bps to 37.5 kbps – Link budget 154 dB [3 ]
– Unslotted Aloha – Topology: star-of-star topology
– Three different classes of end-devices
[1] M. Centenaro, L. Vangelista, A. Zanella, and M. Zorzi, "Long-range communications in unlicensed bands: The rising stars in the IoT and smart city scenarios," IEEE Wireless Communications, vol. 23, no. 5, pp. 60-67, 2016. [2] K. Mikhaylov, J. Petäjäjärvi, and T. Haenninen, "Analysis of capacity and scalability of the LoRa low power wide area network technology," in European Wireless 2016; 22th European Wireless Conference; Proceedings of, 2016, pp. 1-6: VDE. [3] R. S. Sinha, Y. Wei, and S.-H. Hwang, "A survey on LPWA technology: LoRa and NB-IoT," ICT Express, 2017
Figure from [1]
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[1,2]
– Ultra narrow band (UNB) – 100Hz – Data rate 100 bps !
– Retransmit default 3 times
[1]G. Margelis, R. Piechocki, D. Kaleshi, and P. Thomas, "Low throughput networks for the IoT: Lessons learned from industrial implementations," in Internet of Things (WF-IoT), 2015 IEEE 2nd World Forum on, 2015, pp. 181-186: IEEE. [2]: “LPWAN Overview : draft-ietf-LPWAN-overview-01”, IETF, February 2017, Available, https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf- lpwan-overview/01/ [3] A. Laya, C. Kalalas, F. Vazquez-Gallego, L. Alonso, and J. Alonso-Zarate, "Goodbye, aloha!," IEEE access, vol. 4, pp. 2029-2044, 2016.
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– More relaxed regulations on the spectrum use across regions
[1] G. Margelis, R. Piechocki, D. Kaleshi, and P. Thomas, "Low throughput networks for the IoT: Lessons learned from industrial implementations," in Internet of Things (WF-IoT), 2015 IEEE 2nd World Forum on, 2015, pp. 181-186: IEEE.
[Low throughput Network in the IoT Lessons learned]
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– PCA: Introduce PCA slot in which only high priority message can be transmitted
[1] B. G. Gebremedhin, J. Haapola, and J. Iinatti, "Performance Evaluation of IEEE 802.15. 4k Priority Channel Access with DSSS PHY," in European Wireless 2015; 21th European Wireless Conference; Proceedings of, 2015, pp. 1-6: VDE.
Figure from[1]
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– Divide the stations into Traffic Indication Map, TIM groups – Different scheduling to different group – Contend for channel access only among group members- CSMA
[1] A. Laya, C. Kalalas, F. Vazquez-Gallego, L. Alonso, and J. Alonso-Zarate, "Goodbye, aloha!," IEEE access, vol. 4, pp. 2029-2044, 2016. [2] T. Adame, A. Bel, B. Bellalta, J. Barcelo, and M. Oliver, "IEEE 802.11 AH: the WiFi approach for M2M communications," IEEE Wireless Communications, vol. 21, no. 6, pp. 144-152, 2014.
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LoRaWAN SigFox Ingenu IEEE 802.15.4 IEEE 802.11 ah
Link budget 154dB 155dB 168dB 120dB MAC Unslotted Aloha Unslotted Aloha Slotted Aloha-like CSMA, Aloha /PCA CSMA Data rate 300bps-37.5kbps 100 bps 78kB(UL) 19.Kbps (DL) 300bps- 1.2 kbps 0.15-7.8mbps Coverage range km Rural: 10–15 Urban: 3–5 Rural: 30–50 Urban: 3–10 Urban: 15 5-20 km 0.1-1Km
Aloha approach in DSSS channels is validated in [1]: IEEE802.15k prototype radio, urban environments and 5 end-devices. The preamble of each packets is properly detected and distinguishable. Calculations [2] LoRaWAN, suburban: Can serve up to 7 million units. However, less than 10% of the end- devices can reside at a distance over 5km.
[1] X. Xiong, K. Zheng, R. Xu, W. Xiang, and P. Chatzimisios, "Low power wide area machine-to-machine networks: Key techniques and prototype," IEEE Communications Magazine, vol. 53, no. 9, pp. 64-71, 2015. [2] K. Mikhaylov, J. Petäjäjärvi, and T. Haenninen, "Analysis of capacity and scalability of the LoRa low power wide area network technology," in European Wireless 2016; 22th European Wireless Conference; Proceedings of, 2016, pp. 1-6: VDE.
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LoRaWAN SigFox Ingenu IEEE 802.15.4 IEEE 802.11 ah
Link budget 154dB 155dB 168dB 120dB Data rate 300bps-37.5kbps 100 bps 78kB(UL) 19.Kbps (DL) 300bps- 1.2 kbps 0.15-7.8mbps
LTE NB-IoT 5G
Link budget 141dB 164dB Data rate 1mbps UL & DL 250 kbps UL 170 kbps DL 10Gbps
NB-IoT SigFox
BW 180kHz 100Hz Link budget 164dB 155dB Data rate 250 kbps UL, 170 kbps DL 100 bps
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Cellular
Continued investment – Global standard infrastructure
– Time and frequency resources are to be shared between M2M and H2H – Massive amount of M2M devices increase signaling and control traffic – Different communication characteristics
number of M2M devices can impact the
LPWAN
– Several LPWAN technologies, no interoperability
– Every country has different rules about using the sub-GHz spectrum. – ISM employs different SubGHz frequency band: Europe (868 MHz), U.S. (915 MHz) – Cross-technology interference
base-station density – Interference
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– Low Throughput Networks (LTN); Use Cases for Low Throughput Networks – Low Throughput Networks (LTN); Functional Architecture – Low Throughput Networks (LTN); Protocols and Interfaces
– The range of several kilometers and a long battery lifetime, has a price
– However, the systems should be able to interoperate – The IETF contribute by providing IPv6 connectivity
[1]“Low throughput networks (ltn); use cases for low throughput networks,”; “Low throughput networks (ltn); functional architecture,” ; “Low throughput networks (ltn);protocols and interfaces,” ETSI GS LTN 001 V1.1.1, September 2014. [Online]. Available: http://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi gs/LTN/001 099/001/01.01. 01 60/gs LTN001v010101p.pdf [2] LPWAN Work Group – about, available, https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/lpwan/about/
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Scalability
– Challenge: Cross-technology interference – Authority can propose rules for spectrum sharing – Improve channel access techniques
– Challenge: Resource sharing H2H vs M2M – Challenge for M2M traffic: Low ratio between payload and control information – Improve channel access techniques
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Scalability [1,2]
– Challenge: Interference, management and low spectrum utilization – Effective spectrum sharing; cognitive radio – Transmission schedule
– Challenge: congestion, collisions, BW-utilization – Appropriate backoff parameter settings – Slotted solutions require some signaling overhead
[1] U. Raza, P. Kulkarni, and M. Sooriyabandara, "Low Power Wide Area Networks: An Overview," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials,
[2] F. Ghavimi and H.-H. Chen, "M2M communications in 3GPP LTE/LTE-A networks: architectures, service requirements, challenges, and applications," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 525-549, 2015.
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Scalability – suggested solutions MAC layer:
– Include data into the contention process – Modify the Access Class Barring mechanism – Split the available preambles into H2H and M2M
– Colliding data enters Contention Resolution Queue – Success data enters Data Transmission Queue – Implement DQ in the RA procedure of the LTE standard.
[1] A. Laya, L. Alonso, and J. Alonso-Zarate, "Is the Random Access Channel of LTE and LTE-A Suitable for M2M Communications? A Survey of Alternatives," IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 4-16, 2014. [2] A. Laya, C. Kalalas, F. Vazquez-Gallego, L. Alonso, and J. Alonso-Zarate, "Goodbye, aloha!," IEEE access, vol. 4, pp. 2029-2044, 2016.
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– group leader collects and forwards the information to the LTE/ LTE-A station[1]
– Downlink connect the IoT devices using ex. ZigBee – Uplink connect cellular network.
– Buffered in MAC buffers until transmission is triggered
– A testbed setup of Classification reduced the number of uplink transmission form 120 to 60 – Further, using compression the number is reduced to 25.
[1] F. Ghavimi and H.-H. Chen, "M2M communications in 3GPP LTE/LTE-A networks: architectures, service requirements, challenges, and applications," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 525-549, 2015. [2] N. Saxena, A. Roy, B. J. Sahu, and H. Kim, "Efficient IoT Gateway over 5G Wireless: A New Design with Prototype and Implementation Results," IEEE Communications Magazine, vol. 55, no. 2, pp. 97-105, 2017.
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– Challenge: No interoperability – Challenge: Lack of universal infrastructure – Challenge: Cost and revenue sharing / managing
– IP based gateways
[1] U. Raza, P. Kulkarni, and M. Sooriyabandara, "Low Power Wide Area Networks: An Overview," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. PP, no. 99, pp. 1-1, 2017.
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[1] U. Raza, P. Kulkarni, and M. Sooriyabandara, "Low Power Wide Area Networks: An Overview," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. PP, no. 99, pp. 1-1, 2017.
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[1] U. Raza, P. Kulkarni, and M. Sooriyabandara, "Low Power Wide Area Networks: An Overview," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. PP, no. 99, pp. 1-1, 2017.
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[1] U. Raza, P. Kulkarni, and M. Sooriyabandara, "Low Power Wide Area Networks: An Overview," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. PP, no. 99, pp. 1-1, 2017. [2] F. Ghavimi and H.-H. Chen, "M2M communications in 3GPP LTE/LTE-A networks: architectures, service requirements, challenges, and applications," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 525-549, 2015.
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[1] U. Raza, P. Kulkarni, and M. Sooriyabandara, "Low Power Wide Area Networks: An Overview," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials,
[2] F. Ghavimi and H.-H. Chen, "M2M communications in 3GPP LTE/LTE-A networks: architectures, service requirements, challenges, and applications," IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 525-549, 2015.
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– This may cause a differentiation between markets
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