Standardized low-power wireless communication technologies for distributed sensing applications

Author

Vilajosana i Guillén, Xavier

Tuset Peiró, Pere

Vazquez Gallego, Francisco

Alonso Zarate, Jesús

Alonso Zarate, Luis

Publication date

2014-11-05T16:11:18Z

2014-11-05T16:11:18Z

2014-02



Abstract

Recent standardization efforts on low-power wireless communication technologies, including time-slotted channel hopping (TSCH) and DASH7 Alliance Mode (D7AM), are starting to change industrial sensing applications, enabling networks to scale up to thousands of nodes whilst achieving high reliability. Past technologies, such as ZigBee, rooted in IEEE 802.15.4, and ISO 18000-7, rooted in frame-slotted ALOHA (FSA), are based on contention medium access control (MAC) layers and have very poor performance in dense networks, thus preventing the Internet of Things (IoT) paradigm from really taking off. Industrial sensing applications, such as those being deployed in oil refineries, have stringent requirements on data reliability and are being built using new standards. Despite the benefits of these new technologies, industrial shifts are not happening due to the enormous technology development and adoption costs and the fact that new standards are not well-known and completely understood. In this article, we provide a deep analysis of TSCH and D7AM, outlining operational and implementation details with the aim of facilitating the adoption of these technologies to sensor application developers.


info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Low-power wireless; Wireless sensor networks; Radio frequency identification; Medium access control; Time-slotted channel hopping; DASH7 alliance mode; Wireless sensor networks; Radio frequency--Identification; Radiofreqüència; Xarxes de sensors sense fils

Publisher

MDPI AG

Related items

info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/hdl/10609/38721

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/288879

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