Название: High-Density and De-Densified Smart Campus Communications
Автор: Daniel Minoli
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Техническая литература
isbn: 9781119716082
isbn:
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49 49. ISO/IEC 24730:2014 Information technology — real‐time locating systems (RTLS), Second edition 2014‐02‐15, specifically ISO/IEC 24730‐1:2014(E).
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Notes
1 1 The composition of this book started in February 2020. While “social distancing” was a short‐term goal at that juncture, the business and public venue high‐density requirements will resurge and/or continue over time.
2 2 Some (more properly) use or prefer the term “spatial distancing.”
3 3 Classic WaveLAN (a pre‐802.11 protocol) operated in the 900 MHz or 2.4 GHz ISM bands – pursuant to the publication of the IEEE 802.11 standard in 1997 WaveLAN IEEE, supporting the standard was introduced to the market. In WaveLAN, the radio modem section was hidden from the OS, making the WaveLAN card appear to be a typical Ethernet NIC. WaveLAN laid important foundation for the formation of IEEE 802.11 working group and the resultant creation of Wi‐Fi. Wikipedia, WaveLAN, retrieved 27 January 27 2020.
4 4 Some define the term as “Real‐time locating system” while a few others define the term as “Real‐time Location Service” or as “Real‐Time Location Solution.” An exact Google search on the terms depicts the following “Real‐time Location System”: 407 000 results; “Real‐time Locating System”: 63 100 results; “Real‐time Locating Service”: 1360 results; “Real‐time Locating Solution”: 2260 results.
2 Traditional WLAN Technologies
High‐Density Communication (HDC) technologies include the extension of traditional technologies (e.g. Multi‐User Multiple‐Input[s] And Multiple‐Output[s] [MU‐MIMO] approaches, also sometimes known as Massive MIMO), as well as new or evolving technologies.1 In this basic overview chapter, some of the underlying technologies and principles that are applicable to HDC in local environments are surveyed,2 but the discussion is not focused per se on the high‐density specifics, which are covered in the chapters that follow.
2.1 OVERVIEW
The Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) developed Wireless LAN (WLAN) standards starting in the late 1990s; IEEE 802.11b was ratified in July 1999. The 802.11b Wi‐Fi standard had a maximum link speed of 11 Mbps; the 2003 802.11a/g revision increased the speed to 54 Mbps with the introduction of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) technology. The 2009 802.11n allowed a single stream link to operate up to 150 Mbps. The 2013 802.11ac revision of the standard offered the possibility of link speeds around 866 Mbps on a single spatial stream with wider channels (on 160 MHz) and higher modulation orders (256‐QAM) (433 Mbps on smaller channels). While using the maximum number of spatial streams allowed in the standard, this system could support a speed of 6.97 Gbps (these maximum speeds are only achievable in the controlled Radio Frequency [RF] lab environments3). 802.11ax, also called High‐Efficiency Wireless (HEW), aims at improving the average throughput per user fourfold in dense user environments; additionally, this standard implements multiple mechanisms to support more users with consistent and reliable data throughput in crowded spectrum environments.
802.11‐based WLANs include an infrastructure Basic Service Set (BSS). The BSS provides the basic building‐block of the environment and typically includes an Access Point (AP) and one or more associated stations (STAs) – also known as Wireless Nodes (WNs) (or also known as User Equipment [UE] in some other contexts). The AP is a station configured to control and coordinate functions of the BSS. Obviously, a physical environment can include a large number of BSSs. The stations can transmit data to the AP, and in some environments, they can also transmit information to and receive information from another station. A station such as a personal computer or cellular phone may operate as an AP, such as when a cellular phone is configured to operate as a wireless hotspot. The AP can transmit information to a single station, selected from the plurality of stations in the BSS using a single frame, or it can simultaneously transmit information to two or more stations in the BSS using either a single OFDM broadcast frame, a single OFDM MU‐MIMO transmission frame, or a single Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) frame [2]. An AP is a particular type of station; however, for clarity, the term STA is generally used to refer to non‐AP stations.
A WLAN device incorporates a Medium Access Control (MAC) and a Physical Layer (PHY) protocol stack at the lower layers and a set of Internet protocols (e.g. as promulgated by the Internet Engineering Task Force [IETF]) at the upper layers. See Figure 2.1. An AP may include a WLAN router function, or it can be a stand‐alone AP, a WLAN bridge, or a Light‐Weight Access Point managed by a WLAN controller. See Table 2.1 for some preliminary system details. In addition to the infrastructure mode, relatively new “ad hoc” modes (including a form known as Direct Wi‐Fi) have emerged.
FIGURE 2.1 Example of a WLAN (MIMO case).
TABLE 2.1 Comparison of key features of WLANs/WPANs [3]
Wi‐Fi | ZigBee | Bluetooth | |
---|---|---|---|
Type | WLAN | WPAN |
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