View
218
Download
1
Category
Preview:
Citation preview
May 2005
QualcommSlide 1
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Project: IEEE P802.15 Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks Project: IEEE P802.15 Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs)(WPANs)
Submission Title: [BAN IG Call for Applications Response_QC]Date Submitted: [May 1, 2005]Source: [Manuel Jaime] Company [Qualcomm]Address [5775 Morehouse Drive, San Diego, CA 92075 ]Voice:[858-651-5171], E-Mail:[mjaime@qualcomm.com ]
Re: [BAN Interest Group – Call for Applications]
Abstract: [The contribution summarizes use cases and technical issues for body area networks]
Purpose: [To provide information on body area network use cases and technical issues to be addressed]
Notice: This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P802.15. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein.Release: The contributor acknowledges and accepts that this contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may be made publicly available by P802.15.
May 2005
QualcommSlide 2
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Agenda
• Background
• Technical Issues
• Usage Scenarios & Target Specs
May 2005
QualcommSlide 3
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Motivation for Body Area Networks
• Average user carries many devices• Wide range of applications• Devices do not work as a unified system to
provide a “Connected User” experience• The portable/mobile nature of these
devices/applications requires very low power
May 2005
QualcommSlide 4
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Motivation for Low PowerMobile Phone
Music Players
Headsets
Hearing Aid
Treo 600• Phone conversation ~700mW
iPod Nano• Playing music ~100mW (Display off)
Jabra BT 800• 3.7v 140mAh, 6 hr talk• Call/conversation ~90mW / Standby ~40mW
Motorola HS 810•3.6v 150mAh,5 hr talk• Call conversation ~110mW / Standby ~25mW
MS SPOT chipset radio for watches• 90mW during operation / 30uW standby• Additional ARM core 27.6MHz, 1.8mW/MHz -> 50mW
Watches
BANPower Target
Timex Datlink USB Watch• 2 yr battery life (1.55v 80mAh) ~6.8uW avg
Philips Digital Hearing Aid• 1.1v, 35mm^2 in 0.8um process• 2mW avg power consumption
May 2005
QualcommSlide 5
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
BAN Technology Positioning
Data Voice
Low
Hig
h
Bluetooth
Zigbee
Opportunity for BAN
Audio
Power
UWB
BAN
VideoThroughput
2.0/EDR Path
Conceptual / qualitative description. Not to scale.
May 2005
QualcommSlide 6
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Key Technical Issues• Power
– Low average and peak power (<< 100’s of mW)• 1’s of mW @ 1Mbps• 10’s of mW @ 10Mbps
– Duty cycling• Flexible & efficient sleep modes• Fast set-up time
– Battery life• Minimum impact to portable device battery life• Long standby times for sensors, headsets, headphones
• Scalable data rates– Low data rate sensor telemetry (10’s kbps)– Media streaming (up to 10 Mbps)
• Scalable network– Peer-to-peer network topology with no central coordinator– Automatic node detection, network configuration and service discovery– Simultaneous users and applications– Support for multicast
• Spectrum– Global unlicensed footprint– Small antenna design
May 2005
QualcommSlide 7
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Personal/Distributed UI Use Cases
• Secondary display for portable devices– Watch display:
• Incoming calls• Playlists / media info
• Secondary keypad/keyboard• Simultaneous display/UI and:
– Audio/Media streaming– Voice– Sensor data acquisition
• Control– Separate data channel for volume control
and media player controls
May 2005
QualcommSlide 8
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Sensor Use Cases – Data/Telemetry
Speed/Activity
Heart Rate
Display
• Device discovery– Programmable, proximity-based pairing– Programmable, proximity-based data transfer and
security• Multiple simultaneous sensors
– Multiple sensors/user– Multiple user in the vicinity
• Dual-mode support– “Raw” waveform (processing on receiving device)– Digitized data (processing on sensor/transmitter)
• Data acquisition reliability– Store & forward, multihop– Temporary storage on intermediate device
• Simultaneous data and audio/voice use– Independent channel management for multiple
access– Fitness application example
– Sensor data acquisition + audio playback
May 2005
QualcommSlide 9
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Audio Use Cases - Headphones
• Device discovery– Programmable, proximity-based pairing– Low setup latency for fast connection
• Single headphone– One-way streaming audio
• Multiple headphone– Simultaneous users in the vicinity– Support multicasting for music sharing
• Flexible configurations– Star or P2P topologies– Multi-hop capability
• QoS for high quality audio• Controls
– Separate data channel for volume and media player controls
May 2005
QualcommSlide 10
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Voice Use Cases – Headsets• Device discovery
– Programmable, proximity-based pairing– Low setup latency for fast connection
• Single headset– Two-way streaming voice
• Multiple headset– Simultaneous users in the vicinity– Support multicasting for conference calls
• QoS– High priority for voice calls
• Controls– Separate data channel for control functions
(e.g. volume, caller id, call management, etc.)• Simultaneous support of secondary UI
PSTN
May 2005
QualcommSlide 11
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Voice & Audio Use Cases
• Simultaneous voice & audio– Support simultaneous connections to
multiple devices:• Handsets• Digital audio player and a handset
– Support fast switching between audio & voice modes:
• Switch to/from incoming voice call
May 2005
QualcommSlide 12
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Ranging Use Cases
• People & Item Tracking• Multiple item/person tracking• Range
– ~10m for item tracking – ~30m for people tracking
• Proximity Information– Distance– Distance-based alerts– Visual indication of direction– Relative accuracy < 5-10%
May 2005
QualcommSlide 13
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Audio Streaming Use Cases
• Device discovery– Proximity-based pairing– Ranging-based media access and security
• Streaming to single CE device– Varying data rates: 100 kbps – 1 Mbps
• Simultaneous streaming & headphone use– Independent channel management– Peer-to-peer topology, supporting
upload/download of media• Controls
– Separate data channel for volume control and media player controls
May 2005
QualcommSlide 14
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Video Streaming Use Cases
• Device discovery– Proximity-based pairing– Ranging-based media access and security
• Streaming to single CE device– Varying data rates: 10-20 Mbps
• QoS – Latency management for gaming– Video quality/resolution
• Controls– Separate data channel for:
• Volume control• Media player controls• Multiplayer gaming
May 2005
QualcommSlide 15
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-02xxr0
Submission
Use Case Summary – Target SpecsSensor /
TelemetryAudio Voice Ranging Video
Range
• 2-5 m (typical)• Up to 10 m
– e.g. in-hospital sensor to patient monitor
• 2-5 m (typical)• Up to 10 m
– e.g. Living room setting
• 2-5 m (typical)• Up to 10 m
– e.g. hands-free “roaming”
• ~10 m (items)• ~ 30 m (people)
• 2-5 m (typical)• Up to 10 m
– e.g. Living room setting
Data Rates 10 – 100 kbps 1 Mbps50-100 kbps
(per voice channel)NA 10-20 Mbps
Duty Cycling
• Low duty cycle on standby mode: ~0.5%
• Low duty cycle on standby mode: ~0.5%
• Rate adapted duty cycle on active mode
•Low duty cycle on standby mode: ~0.5%•Rate adapted duty cycle on active mode
•Low duty cycle on standby mode: ~0.5%
•Low duty cycle on standby mode: ~0.5%•Rate adapted duty cycle on active mode
QoS NA• BER: ~1e-5 (high
quality)• Latency: < 20 ms
•BER: ~1e-3
•Latency: <10 msNA
• BER: ~1e-3 - 1e-6
• Latency:– <50 ms (gaming)– <100 ms (video)
Set-up NA200-500 msec set-up latency
200-500 msec set-up latency
NA200-500 msec set-up latency
Recommended