Automatic Remote Car Locker Using Bluetooth Low Energy Wireless Communication

Author(s):  
Syed Mohd Faraaz ◽  
B. Balaji Naik ◽  
Dhananjay Singh
Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 2257
Author(s):  
Bozheng Pang ◽  
Kristof T’Jonck ◽  
Tim Claeys ◽  
Davy Pissoort ◽  
Hans Hallez ◽  
...  

Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) is a popular wireless communication protocol heavily used in Internet of Things applications. Nowadays, robustness is considered a key requirement in wireless communication. However, radio interference from various sources may affect the performance of BLE devices, leading to channel congestion. Therefore, there is a broadly recognized need of methodologies capable of sensing and avoiding interference. In this paper, two improvements at the data link layer for interference detection and channel selection are proposed to enhance the BLE connection robustness. This paper also presents a wide range of experimental evaluations aiming at validating the improvements and providing insights on both these improvements. Particularly, the communication performance of the BLE link layer is assessed in terms of channel usage distribution, supervision timeout ratio (STR) and packet loss rate (PLR) under different interference environments. Results from these experiments (reliability over 97% and 99% under two different harsh environments) highlight the effects of both improvements on the BLE robustness. Meanwhile, the authority of scheduling the whole mechanism is given to the link layer and even the higher application layer. This paper provides a set of solutions for BLE confronting interference in link layer.


Author(s):  
Jordan Frith

The phrase the Internet of things was originally coined in a 1999 presentation about attaching radio frequency identification (RFID) tags to individual objects. These tags would make the objects machine-readable, uniquely identifiable, and, most importantly, wirelessly communicative with infrastructure. This chapter evaluates RFID as a piece of mobile communicative infrastructure, and it examines two emerging forms: near-field communication (NFC) and Bluetooth low-energy beacons. The chapter shows how NFC and Bluetooth low-energy beacons may soon move some types of RFID to smartphones, in this way evolving the use of RFID in payment and transportation and enabling new practices of post-purchasing behaviors.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1631 ◽  
pp. 012162
Author(s):  
Yan Long ◽  
Yongli Chen ◽  
Deyong Xiao ◽  
Zheng Li ◽  
Tianpeng Hou ◽  
...  

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