doc.: ieee 802.15-06-0331 submission body area networks july 2006 stefan drude, philipsslide 1
TRANSCRIPT
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
Body Area Networks
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 1
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 2
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: [Tutorial on Body Area Networks]Date Submitted: [July 18, 2006]Source: [Stefan Drude] Company [Philips]Address [High Tech Campus 60, 5656 AG Eindhoven, The Netherlands] ]Voice:[+31 40 27-23431], FAX: [+31 40 27-22764], E-Mail:[[email protected] ]
Re: [Tutorial]
Abstract: [The contribution reflects the information presented at the tutorial on body area networks presented at the San Diego meeting on July 18, 2006.]
Purpose: [To provide information on body area network use cases, typical requirements, and to start the process on possibly starting a study group in 802.15 on this topic.]
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.
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 3
Overview
• Body Area Networks – S. Drude– Quick summary use cases, requirements
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 4
Body Area Network
• Broad range of possible devices
• Broad range of media types
• Connect everything you carryon you and with you
• Offer “Connected User” experience
• Matches low power environment
• Challenge – scalability data rate, power
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 5
Body Area Networks –Target PositionAverage power consumption, sustained data rate
1000 mW500 mW100 mW 50 mW 10 mW
1 Gbit/s
100 kbit/s
1 Mbit/s
10 Mbit/s
100 Mbit/s
1 kbit/s
10 kbit/s
Wireless USB
IEEE 802.11 a/b/g
Bluetooth
ZigBee
200 mW 20 mW
Body Are
a Netw
ork
5 mW 2 mW
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
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July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 6
Body Area Networks
• Usage Scenarios– Body senor network– Fitness monitoring– Wearable audio– Mobile device centric– Video stream
– Remote control &I/O devices
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 7
Body Sensor Network
• Medical application– Vital patient data– Wireless sensors– Link with bedside monitor– Count on 10 – 20 sensors
• Five similar networks in range• Minimum setup interaction• Potentially wide application• Total traffic / patient < 10 kbps
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
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July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 8
Fitness Monitoring
• Central device is MP3 player• Wireless headset included• Expand functionality
– Speed, distance– Heart rate, respiration monitor– Temperature sensor– Pacing information– Location information– Wristwatch display unit– Etc.
• Total system load < 500 kbps• Synchronization may go faster
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 9
Wearable Audio
• Central device is headset• Stereo audio, microphone• Connected devices
– Cellular phone– MP3 player, PDA– CD audio player– AP at home– Handsfree car– Remote control– Others
• Requires priority mechanism• Network load < 500 kbps
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
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July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 10
Mobile Device Centric
• Mobile terminal is central point• Covers broad set of data
– Sensors – vital, other– Headset– Peripheral devices– Handsfree / car
• Provide gateway to outside– Offload sensor data, other
• Requires priority mechanism• Network load < 500 kbps
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 12
Remote Control & I/O Devices
• Remote control device• Increase consumer convenience• Makes headset control practical• Stand-alone vs shared function• Combine with wristwatch display ?
• Printers• Identification, storage• Wireless pen
• Complement BAN functionality
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
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July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 13
Technical Requirements
• There is no specific standard for BANs– Current standards come close for specific use
cases, not broad enough– Issues: power consumption, discovery, QoS– Support for very low power devices, sensors
• Target less than 10% power consumption for communications compared to total device
• Have single standard with broad range of supported data rate - scalability
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
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July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 14
BAN Requirements - Draft
• Distance 2 m std, 5 m special• Piconet density 2 - 4 nets / m2 • Devices per network max. 100• Net network throughput 100 Mbit/s max.• Power consumption ~ 1mW / Mbps
(@ 1 m distance)
• Startup time < 100 us, or< 10% of TX slot
• Latency (end to end) 10 ms • Network setup time < 1 sec
(after initial setup, per device)
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 15
BAN Requirements - Draft
• Implementation module cost• Should be comparable to Bluetooth module
• Effective sleep mode(s)
• Concept for effective, remote wake-up
• Operates in global, license-exempt band
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
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July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 16
BAN Requirements - Draft
• Privacy, security• Peer to peer communication, point to multi-
point• Omni-directional antennas: small, flexible• Future proof [for 5 years?]
– Upgradeable, scaleable, backwards compatibility
• Support for several power management / consumption schemes [classes]
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 17
BAN Requirements - Draft
• Quality of service, guaranteed bandwidth– Specific definitions, depends on application
• Graceful degradation of services– Depends on application, not always desireable
• Concurrent availability of asynchronous and isochronous channels
• Low duty cycle and high duty cycle modes• Very low duty cycle applications (sensors)
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 18
Interest Group on BAN in 802.15Conclusions on low data rate applications
• Operates on, inside, or in the vicinity of the body• Limited range (< .01 – 2 meters)• The channel model will include human body effects.
(absorption, health effects)• Extremely low consumption power (.1 to 1 mW) for
each device• Capable of energy scavenging / battery-less
operation• Support scalable Data Rate: 0.01 – 1,000 kbps
(optional 10 Mbps)
doc.: IEEE 802.15-06-0331
Submission
July 2006
Stefan Drude, PhilipsSlide 19
Interest Group on BAN in 802.15 (2)Conclusions on low data rate applications
• Support different classes of QoS for high reliability, asymmetric traffic, power constrained
• Needs optimized, low complexity MAC and Networking layer
• High number of simultaneously operating piconets required
• Application specific, security/privacy required• Small form factor for the whole radio, antenna, power
supply system• Locating radios (” find me”) mode