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WLAN vs WPAN: Key Differences Explained

Wireless communication and mobile computing Chapter 4

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
79 views35 pages

WLAN vs WPAN: Key Differences Explained

Wireless communication and mobile computing Chapter 4

Uploaded by

alazarjesus4
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Wireless communication

and Mobile
Computing
Chapter Three
WLAN and WPAN
Instructor: Agmas G.
Outli
ne
 WLAN and WPAN
 IEEE 802.11 WLAN
Ethernet
 IEEE 802.11 WLAN
Bluetooth
 WPAN
 Sensor Networks

2
Introduct
ion
Wireless systems consist of
 Wireless local area networks (WLAN),
 Wireless personal area networks (WPAN)
 Wireless metro area networks(WMAN)
 wireless wide-area networks (WWAN)[i.e.,
cellular systems],
 The diagram below shows a brief
idea to the network evolution.

3
Wireless Local Area
 Networks
Support (WLAN)
communication to mobile data users via
wireless channel in a small area (around 100
meters).
 Wireless devices that access these LANs are
typically stationary or moving at pedestrian
speeds.
 The 1G of WLANproducts provided data
rates ofabout 1-2 Mbps;
 Current generation data rates up to 54 Mbps.
 Mobile device in the WLANs connected to
wirednetworks provided through an “access
point”. 4
 The IEEE 802.11 committee is
Cont
IV. ESS’d
 Set of infrastructure BSS’s
 AP’s communicate with each other
 Forward traffic from one BSS to another
Facilitate movement of stations from
one BSS to another
 Extends range of mobility beyond
reach
of a single BSS
V. Distribution system
 The fixed (wired) infrastructure used to connect a
set of BSS to form a single network and thereby
extends
. the wireless coverage area. 5
Cont
 IEEE’d802.11 standard belongs to
the groupof 802.x LAN standards,
 e.g., 802.3 Ethernet or 802.5 Token Ring
 The standard specifies the physical and
medium access layer adapted to the special
requirements of wireless LANs
 The standard has been issued in several stages.
 The first part, issued in 1997, is simply called
802.11 and operates at 1 and 2 Mbps.
 WLANs include IEEE 802.11a (WiFi 5),
IEEE 802.11b
(WiFi), IEEE 802.11g and IEEE 802.11n 6
Cont
’d
 802.11a:
 operates in the 5 GHz band and can go up to 54 Mbps
 Transmission range: 100m outdoor, 10m indoor
 E.g., 54 Mbit/s up to 5 m, 48 up to 12 m, 36 up to 25 m,
24 up to 30m, 18 up to 40 m, 12 up to 60 m
 Less prone to interference and More expensive.
 802.11b:
 These LANs use the 2.2-to-2.4835 GHz band
 operates at data rates up to 11 Mbps
 also known as Wi-Fi (abbreviated from wireless
fidelity)
 provides great vendor interoperability
 operate in a manner very similar to the wired
7
Ethernet LANs
Cont
’d A government license is not required to
operate equipment in this frequency range
 Prone to interference (it shares
airspace with cell phones,
Bluetooth, security radios, and other
devices).
 Because 802.11b and 802.11a use different
radio technologies and
portions of the spectrum, they are
incompatible with one another.
 802.11g:
 802.11g is an enhancement of 802.11b
 Dual-mode 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz operability
 can go up to 54 Mbps 8


Cont
’d
 802.11aVersus 802.11g
 operates in different frequency band
 802.11a distance range is lower than 802.11g
(higher frequencies have shorter ranges)
 cost of 802.11a could be higher – you need more
access points for the same area
 802.11n:
 Speed: Up to 700Mbs
 Range: 50 feet

9
Cont
’dWi-Fi
Characteristics

1
0
Cont
’d


Wireless LAN
Technologies
1
1
Cont
’d operating modes
Main
 Ad-hoc mode
 Participants: only clients
 Communications: peer-to-
peer
 For ad-hoc networks
 Infrastructure mode
 Participants: AP and clients t
 Communications: only s
between AP and clien
 AP: provides also connection
between
1
the wireless and wireline 2
Wireless Personal Area
 Network(WPAN)
Networks that connect devices within a small
range
 Typically on the order of 10-100 meters
 Application areas
 Cable replacement
 Eliminates need for numerous cable attachments
 Hook your laptop to your PDA, headphones, mouse,
keyboard, printer,
camera, etc.
 Ad hoc networking
 Device with PAN radio can establish connection with another when
in range
 Use band available globally for unlicensed users
1
 Defined in a global band (2.45 GHz ISM band) 3
Applications of
WPANs

1
4
Bluetooth
Standard
 Universal short-range wireless capability
 Bluetooth devices should work anywhere in the world
(mostly)
 Devices within 10 m can share up to 865 kbps of
capacity
 Bluetooth ≈ IEEE 802.15.1
 Bluetooth standardization began in 1998
 Sponsors
 Initial: Ericsson, Nokia, IBM,Toshiba, and Intel
 Expanded in 1999 to include 3
Com, Lucent, Microsoft, and
[Link] of companies are now adopters
 Goals of system design
1
 Global operation 5
Cont
’dfixed infrastructure required for
 No network set-up
or maintenance
 Voice and data connections
 Small, low power radio (1 mW transmit power to
 get 10 m range)
Bluetooth enabled electronic
 Low cost: $5-$10 per node
communicate
devices connect wirelessly
and
through short-range, ad Hoc
networks known as piconets.
 Up to 8 devices in one piconet (1 master and
7 slave devices).
 The reason for the upper limit of eight active
devices, is the 3- bit address used in
Bluetooth. 1
6
Cont
’d operation
 Piconet

 The piconet master is a device in a piconet whose

clock and device address are used to define the


piconet physical channel characteristics.
 All other devices in the piconet are called piconet

slaves.
 At any given time, data can be transferred between

the master
and one slave.

1
 The master switches rapidly from slave to slave in a
7
ZigBee
 Technology
ZigBee technology is a low data rate, low
power consumption, low cost, wireless
networking protocol
 Works in 2.4GHZ standard frequency
 The specification is based on the IEEE
802.15.4 standard
 Is capable of connecting 255 devices per
network
 Can be implemented in mesh (peer- to-peer)
networks larger than is possible with
Bluetooth
 Data rates of up to 250 Kbps at a range of up1
8
to 30 m
Cont
’d
 Star topology
Communication is established between devices
and a single
central controller, called the PAN coordinator.
 Applications: home automation, personal computer
(PC) peripherals, toys, and games.
 Peer-to-peer topology
 peer-to-peer topology, there is also one PAN
coordinator.
 In contrast to star topology, any device can
communicate with any other device as long as they
are in range of one another.
 Applications: industrial control and
monitoring, wireless sensor 1
networks and asset and inventory tracking 9
Cont
’d
Cluster-tree topology
 Is a special case of a peer-to-peer network in
which most devices are FFD and an RFD may
connect to a cluster-tree network as a leaf
node at the end of a branch.
 Advantage: increased coverage at the cost of
increased message latency.

2
0
Cont
’d

2
1
Wireless Metro Area Networks
 (WMAN)
WMAN – Wireless Metropolitan Area Network –
IEEE 802.16
 IEEE 802.16
 Defines the air interface, including the MAC layer
and multiple PHY layer options, for fixed Broadband
Wireless Access (BWA) systems to be used in
WMAN.
 Often referred to as WiMax (Worldwide
Interoperability for Microwave Access)
 IEEE 802.16 cannot be used in a mobile
environment. For this purpose, IEEE 802.16e is
being developed.
 WiMAX
2
 “a big Wi-Fi” 2
GIFI
Network
Advantages of GIFI
 Low power consumption: Even though GI-FI
transfer large amount of information but it
consumes very less power in the range of few
mille-watts only.
 GI-FI uses very little one-millimeter-wide antenna
and it has less than 2mili watts of power
consumption that in compare to the current
technologies is very less.
 High security: the IEEE 802.15.3C provides more
security.
 Cost effectiveness: The use of low-cost, mass
produced chipsets will drive costs down 2
3
GIFI
Network
Small size: The size of the GI-FI chip is
5×5 millimeter and
can be placed in different devices such as
mobile phones.
 The chip has a tiny 1mm antenna and uses
the 60GHz.
 Faster Data Transmission: GI-FI is a
wireless transmission system which is ten
times faster than Wi-Fi and its chip delivers
short-range multi-gigabit data transfer in an
indoor environment.
 It will allow wireless transfer of audio and
video data up to 5 gigabits per second. 2
4
Sensor
Network
 Wireless Sensor Networks are networks that consists of
sensors which are distributed in an ad hoc manner.
 These sensors work with each other to sense some
physical phenomenon and then the information
gathered is processed to get relevant results.
 Wireless sensor networks consists of protocols and
algorithms
with self-organizing capabilities.
 Sensor networks are highly distributed networks of
small, lightweight wireless node, deployed in large
numbers to monitor the environment or system.

2
5
Cont
 Each node of the sensor networks consist of the
’d subsystem:
following
 Sensor subsystem: senses the environment
 Processing subsystem: performs local
computations on the sensed data
 Communication subsystem: responsible for
message exchange with neighboring sensor
nodes
 Security subsystem: responsible for securing
the system
 Power Management subsystem
 The features of sensor nodes
 Limited sensing region, processing power,
energy
26 WSNs are networks that consists of sensors
Cont
’dconsists of protocols and algorithms with self-
 WSNs
organizing capabilities.
 Sensor networks are highly distributed networks of
small, lightweight wireless node, deployed in large
numbers to monitor the environment or system.
 Each node of the sensor networks consist of three
subsystem:
 Sensor subsystem: senses the environment
 Processing subsystem: performs local computations on the
sensed data
 Communication subsystem: responsible for message
exchange with
neighboring sensor nodes
27
 The features of sensor nodes
Cont
 The’d
advantage of sensor networks
 Robust : a large number of sensors
 Reliable :
 Accurate : sensor networks covering a wider region
 Fault-tolerant : many nodes are sensing the same
event
 Two important operations in a sensor networks
 Data dissemination : the propagation of
data/queries throughout the network
 Data gathering : the collection of observed data from
the individual sensor nodes to a sink
28
Cont
’d
Using in military
 Battlefield surveillance and monitoring,
guidance systems of intelligent missiles,
detection of attack by weapons of mass
destruction such as chemical, biological,
or nuclear
 Using in nature
 Forest fire, flood detection, habitat
exploration of animals
 Using in health
 Monitor the patient’s heart rate or blood
pressure, and sent regularly to alert the
29
concerned doctor, provide patients a
Cont
’d
Using in home (smart home)
 Sensor node can built into appliances at
home, such as ovens, refrigerators, and
vacuum cleaners, which enable them to
interact with each other and be remote-
controlled
 Using in office building
 Airflow and temperature of different parts
of the building can
be automatically controlled
 Using in warehouse
 Improve their inventory control system by
30
installing sensors on the products to track
Comparison with Ad Hoc
Wireless Networks
 Different from Ad Hoc wireless networks
 The number of nodes in sensor network can be
several orders of magnitude large than the number of
nodes in an ad hoc network.
 Sensor nodes are more easy to failure and energy
drain, and their battery sources are usually not
replaceable or rechargeable.
 Sensor nodes may not have unique global identifiers
(ID), so unique addressing is not always feasible in
sensor networks.
 Sensor nodes may not have global ID because of
the large amount of overhead and large number of
sensors.
 Sensor networks are data-centric, the queries in
31
sensor networks are addressed to nodes which have
Cont
’d Ad Hoc networks are address-centric, with
queries addressed to particular nodes
specified by their unique address.
 WSNs mainly use broadcast
communication while ad hoc
networks use point-to-point
communication.
 Unlike ad hoc networks WSNs are limited by
sensors limited power, energy and
computational capability.

32
Characteristics
ofWSNs
WSNsmainly consists of sensors.
 Sensors are -
 low power
 limited memory
 energy constrained due to their small size.
 Wireless networks can also be deployed in
extreme environmental conditions and
may be prone to enemy attacks.
 Although deployed in an ad hoc manner
they need to be self organized and self
healing and can face constant
reconfiguration.

33
Summ
ary
Wireless Wide Area Networks
(WWANs)
 Cellular Networks :
 GSM, cdmaone (IS-95), UMTS, cdma2000
EVDO
 Satellite Networks:
 Iridium, Inmarsat, GPS, etc.
 Wireless Metro Area Networks
(WMANs)
 IEEE 802.16 WiMAX
 Wireless Local Area Networks
(WLANs)
 IEEE 802.11, a, b, g, etc. 3
4
Summ
ary

3
5

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