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LoRaWAN™ for Smart Cities Munich, May 2015 Jonathan Pearce Wireless Marketing Manager www.LoRa-Alliance.org IoT Context … by Range • IoT is all encompassing, with ranges scaling from wearables to the wide-area • Data becomes valuable when connected to the cloud Personal Area BT / NFC Building Area WiFi / ZigBee € Value $ £ Wide Area Cellular / Satellite 3 LoRaWAN™ Use-Cases: Monitoring/ Control Light Control Smart Energy Smart Agriculture Smart City Smart Home and Security 4 Essential Requirements ✓ #1 - Long Range, greater than existing infrastructure ✓ #2 - Long battery autonomy, 10 years or more ✓ #3 - Low cost: infrastructure, nodes, service ✓ #4 - Scalable & robust infrastructure ✓ #5 - Secure and trusted ✓ #6 - Simple commissioning ✓ #7 - Open & interoperable standard ✓ #8 - “Killer-App” features ✗High data rate – not needed in most IoT systems 5 What is LoRaTM Technology? A combination of two major concepts: • LoRaTM spread spectrum modulation • Provides the core long range capability Up to 5km range in urban environment, up to 15km suburban • Developed by Cycleo, acquired by Semtech • Powerful gateway baseband allows multiple receive channels • LoRaWANTM network protocol stack • Provides the cellular network (aka large-star topology) • Defined by IBM & Actility, made open by the LoRaTM Alliance • Flat & modern “software defined” architecture: • Routing complexity is centralized in the cloud data center • Gateways are relatively basic RF-to-IP packet forwarders 6 #1 – Long-Range Modulation LoRaTM uses ‘Chirp’ spread spectrum modulation -138dBm 145 LoR a 140 135 sensitivity (dBm) 130 125 120 115 110 GFSK 105 100 95 3 10 4 10 bits/sec 5 10 Innovative & cost sensitive transceiver implementation Demodulate signals below the noise floor, improving sensitivity by ~20dB Robust against interference, noise, and jamming from WiFi, BT, GSM, 3G, LTE Multiples signals can occupy the same channel (CDMA) Tolerant to frequency offsets (unlike DSSS or narrow-band) 7 LoRaWAN™ Coverage Test Smart City Coverage ! • 1000 node demo during Electronica trade-show • 6 gateways, giving full coverage of NW quarter of Munich City • 15km between suburban GWs • 5km between urban GWs • Excellent robust comms and indoor penetration 8 #2 – Long Battery Autonomy Typ. 40mA @+14dBm Typ. 1uA Typ. 11mA 1 second Tx Packet End device sleeps Rx slot 1 Rx slot 2 End Device 1 second Rx slots 1 & 2 are optional for ACK or DL Fast Rx sync means unused Rx slots use negligible energy compared to Tx 5 Symbols: 5.1 ms @ SF7 10.2 ms @ SF8 … 164 ms SF12 9 #2 – Long Battery Autonomy Assumptions: 20 transactions / day Sleep current ~1uA (including the MCU) MCU is mostly Off during Tx ACK not used The energy usage of the 2 unused Rx windows is negligible (<1%) Pout = +14 dBm, IDDTX = 40 mA Tx Payload size (Bytes) 290 bps SF12 1 kbps SF10 5.4 kbps SF7 4 ~5.3 uA ~2.3 uA ~1.2 uA 16 ~8.4 uA ~3.2 uA ~1.4 uA 32 ~12.5 uA ~4.4 uA ~1.6 uA Typical solution using a 16 byte payload and mostly SF10 needs only 300mAh battery for 10 year autonomy 10 LoRaTM Modulation Benefits (#3 – Low Cost & #4 – Scalable) Key Features 162dBm link budget (-148dBm sensitivity, +14dBm Tx @ 868MHz) Application Benefit Longest range Jamming resistant – tolerant to burst interference >100dB blocking Robust links and network efficiency Simultaneous transmissions on same channel Insensitive to XTAL offsets (no TCXO) Lower system cost Eliminates need for repeaters 10mA RX current, nA sleep current Extended battery lifetime 11 What is LoRaWANTM Protocol? (WAN = Wide Area Network) A Large-Scale, Bi-directional, Secured, Cellular Network Designed for low data-rate (~1kbps), low duty-cycle (~100mins), high capacity (~100k nodes) & long battery life (~10yrs) Developed, maintained and promoted by the LoRaTM Alliance Microchip is a founder member and sits on Strategic, Marketing & Technical committees Deployable as both public or private networks Scalable from a single gateway to national coverage Multi-Usage Bidirectional Low Cost Security High capacity Bidirectional Minimal infrastructure Unique ID Multi-tenant Scalable Capacity Simple gateways Application Key Public networks Broadcast Low cost end-nodes Network Key 12 TM #4 - LoRaWAN Private Network Individually managed networks, total end-to-end ownership Public Network Infrastructure Telco operator managed networks, servicing subscriber nodes Hybrid Network Enterprise deployment of Nodes & Gateways, for specific area coverage Provisioned to a commercial LoRaWAN server product End Users Products with Microchip LoRaWANTM Modem Telco Operator LoRaWANTM Gateways LoRaWAN Network Server 13 Case Study: Senet (USA) A single business case was enough to justify building a private LoRaWAN™ network Heating fuel (propane) delivery to residential properties Previously inefficient – were filling cautiously when still 50% full Adding cloud-connected level sensor reduces 2 to 3 deliveries / year Also creates customer interaction, fuel level data is viewable online Looked at cellular (too power hungry) and Wi-Fi (intrusive to customer’s network) but found LoRaWAN to be the best solution Once established, Senet is able to open this LoRaWAN network as a public service Multi-tenant business model further improves revenue and ROI Expands network, improves density & capacity ‘Almost instant’ availability of a public network 14 #5 – End-to-end Security Customer Node App Secure Payload Data - AES128 AppsKey MCHP Modem UART Customer Server App Data base Logical connection - AES128 NwksKey Parser LoRaWAN Slave LoRaWAN Master Radio driver Server IF SPI LoRa Radio Gateway Packet Forwarder Coax SPI UART GPS Concentrator LoRa Node Coax PPS TCP/IP Network Controller CLOUD 16 #6 – Simple Commissioning “No touch” out-of-the-box commissioning Two activation methods available: ABP Activation-By-Personalization Shared keys stored at production Locked to a specific network OTAA Over-the-Air Activation Based on Globally Unique ID Flexible Channel Plan 17 #7 – Open Standards TM & The LoRa Alliance An open, non-profit association of members that believes the Internet-of-Things era is now Already more than 40 companies have joined with over 400 requests for membership Missionto standardize Low Power Wide Area Networks (LPWAN) being deployed around the world to enable Internet-of-Things (IoT), Machine-to-Machine (M2M), smart city and industrial applications The Alliance members will collaborate to drive the global success of the LoRaTM protocol (LoRaWANTM), by sharing knowledge and experience to guarantee interoperability between operators and devices in one open global standard www.LoRa-Alliance.org 18 #8 – The “Killer App” Localization • Node positioning to 10m • No reception or computation burden on the end-node • Positioning functionality with 10 year battery life X1,Y1,Z1 X2,Y2,Z2 ΔT2 Computation Performed In the Cloud ΔT1 ΔT3 X3,Y3,Z3 20 Next Steps … Visit us on the Mouser Stand www.LoRa-Alliance.org www.Microchip.com/LoRa 21 Trademarks The Microchip name and logo, the Microchip logo, dsPIC, KeeLoq, KeeLoq logo, MPLAB, PIC, PICmicro, PICSTART, PIC32 logo, rfPIC and UNI/O are registered trademarks of Microchip Technology Incorporated in the U.S.A. and other countries. FilterLab, Hampshire, HI-TECH C, Linear Active Thermistor, MXDEV, MXLAB, SEEVAL and The Embedded Control Solutions Company are registered trademarks of Microchip Technology Incorporated in the U.S.A. Analog-for-the-Digital Age, Application Maestro, chipKIT, chipKIT logo, CodeGuard, dsPICDEM, dsPICDEM.net, dsPICworks, dsSPEAK, ECAN, ECONOMONITOR, FanSense, HI-TIDE, In-Circuit Serial Programming, ICSP, Mindi, MiWi, MPASM, MPLAB Certified logo, MPLIB, MPLINK, mTouch, Omniscient Code Generation, PICC, PICC-18, PICDEM, PICDEM.net, PICkit, PICtail, REAL ICE, rfLAB, Select Mode, Total Endurance, TSHARC, UniWinDriver, WiperLock and ZENA are trademarks of Microchip Technology Incorporated in the U.S.A. and other countries. SQTP is a service mark of Microchip Technology Incorporated in the U.S.A. All other trademarks mentioned herein are property of their respective companies. © 2015, Microchip Technology Incorporated, All Rights Reserved. 22