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BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity Jaap C.Haartsen Ericssion Radio System B.V. 2000 IEEE
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BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Jan 01, 2016

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BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity. Jaap C.Haartsen Ericssion Radio System B.V. 2000 IEEE. Introduction. A new universal radio interface that enable electronic devices to connect and communicate via short-range radio connections - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

BLUETOOTHTM:A new radio interface providing

ubiquitous connectivity

Jaap C.HaartsenEricssion Radio System B.V.

2000 IEEE

Page 2: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Introduction

A new universal radio interface that enable electronic devices to connect and communicate via short-range radio connectionsOperates in the unlicensed 2.45GHz frequency band and makes use of frequency hopping

Page 3: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Introduction

Low-power,small-sized and low-cost radios that can be embedded in a wide range of future productsThe interface supports: Synchronous services—voice Asynchronous services—file transfer

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History

At the beginning of 1998, a group of five companies—Ericsson, Nokia, IBM, Toshiba, and Intel—founded a Special Interest GroupAt the end of 1999, the group was extended with Microsoft, Motorola, Lucent, and 3COM to further develop

Page 5: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

General Purposes

Bridging standards: a universal access mechanismFunctional integration: a functional integration is obtained by connecting several devices wirelesslyUniversal interface: provide a universal interface and overcome incompatible connectors and protocols

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The BluetoothTM air interface

Peer connectivityUnlicensed spectrumFSK transceiversDynamic slot structurePacket transmission

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Peer Connectivity

BluetoothTM is based on peer connectivity: any device must be able to connect to any other deviceCellular phone and wireless LANs system is based on an infrastructure of interconnected stationary base stations

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Unlicensed spectrum

The ISM band ranging from 2400 MHz to 2483.5 MHzA major issue for BluetoothTM is interference immunityOptimal interference immunity against jammers is obtained by frequency hopping

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Unlicensed spectrum (cont.)

BluetoothTM is based on FH-CDMA using 79 carriers 1MHz spacesThe nominal hopping rate is 1600 hops/sEach BluetoothTM unit has its own pseudo-random hopping sequence

Page 10: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Hop selection mechanism

Page 11: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

PSK transceivers

The air interface uses a Gaussian-shaped (BT=0.5) FSK modulation with a symbol rate of 1 Ms/sGives a –20dB spectral bandwidth of 1 MHzFSK radios are simple, cheap, and robust

Page 12: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Dynamic slot structrue

The BluetoothTM air interface is based on time slotsA time slot lasts 625 usIn a point-to-point connection, one unit always starts to transmit in the even-numbered slots where the other unit transmit in the odd-numbered slots

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Dynamic slot structrue (cont.)

A circuit-switched connection is created by a SCO(Synchronous Connection-Oriented) linkAll slot not in use for SCO links can be used for packet-switched traffic through a ACL(Asynchronous Connection-Less) link

Page 14: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Dynamic slot allocation

Page 15: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Packet transmission

The information stream is fragmented into packetsOnly one packet can be sent in each slotAll packets have the same format: access code, packet header, user payload

Page 16: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Packet format

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Packet transmission (cont.)

Access code : the identity of the masterPacket header : 3-bit slave address 2-bit ARQ control information 4-bit packet type code 8-bit header-error-check(HEC) code

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The BluetoothTM connectivity

Pico- and scatternetsConnection establishmentSynchronizationSecurity

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Pico- and scatternets

Two or more BluetoothTM units sharing the same FH channel form a piconetA cluster of co-located, independent piconet is called a scatternetThe number of units active in a piconet is limited to 8

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Pico- and scatternets (cont.)

The master-slave concept has been introducedOne unit in the piconet is assigned to be the masterThe remaining units participating on the channel are slaves

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Pico- and scatternets (cont.)

The master-slave are only roles which exist during the presence of the piconetUsing the 3-bit slave address in the header, the master can direct packets to the proper recipients

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Connection establishment

The pager :the unit who wants to make the connectionThe recipient :the unit in standby that must be susceptible to the pagerThe burden of solving the time-frequency uncertainty has been placed at the pager

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Standby state

A unit in standby resides in a low-power stateSleeps most of the timeWakes up at the fixed intervals to scan a single hop carrier for a short period of time

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Page message

Consists of a single 68-bit codeA shortened version of the 72-bit access code used in front of the packetThe code is derived from the identity of the recipient

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Paging

To page a unit, its identity must be knownIf a pager has no identity or wants to discover which units are in range, it can issue an inquiry messageThe inquiry procedure works similar as the page procedure

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Synchronization

In the BluetoothTM system, each unit has a free-running native clockAn accuracy of 20ppm when the unit is active and 250ppm when the unit is in a low-power mode

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Synchronization (cont.)

A BluetoothTM unit have a list of unit addressed with corresponding native clocksThe slave add an offset to their native clock in order to be hop synchronized to the master

Page 28: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Synchronization

Page 29: BLUETOOTH TM :A new radio interface providing ubiquitous connectivity

Security

Apply a conventional challenge-response schemeTo prevent eavesdropping, payload information is encryptedKeys of 128 bits are pair-wise generated during an initialization phase

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Conclusion

BluetoothTM is a young technologyThe applications seem to be unlimited and new scenarios are discussed every dayHigher data rates are envisioned which will boost the current data rate by a factor 10 to 20