Bluetooth: Author: Asharani P. Mirazkar Vijaylaxmi A. Horakeri
Bluetooth: Author: Asharani P. Mirazkar Vijaylaxmi A. Horakeri
BLUETOOTH
Abstract
Introduction
About Bluetooth
Network topology
The Scatternet
When two Piconets are close to each other, they have overlapping coverage areas.
This scenario is provided for in the Bluetooth specification and is referred to as a
scatternet. A typical example: one might have a Piconet consisting of the mobile phone
and the PC in one’s cubicle, while the person in the neighboring cubicle may have a
Piconet consisting of a mobile phone, headset, and business card scanner.
Slaves in one Piconet can participate in another Piconet as either a master or slave. This
is accomplished through time division multiplexing. In a scatternet, the two (or more)
Piconets are not synchronized in either time or frequency. Each of the Piconets operates
in its own frequency-hopping channel while any devices in multiple Piconets participate
at the appropriate time via time division multiplexing. In the previous example, the
person in cubicle #1 may use the neighbour’s business card scanner on mutually agreed
upon terms.
Frequency Hopping
625µs
200µs
Figure 4. Three-slot and five-slot long packets reduce overhead compared to one-slot packets. 220 s switching time
after the packet is needed for changing the frequency.
Subsequent time slots are used for transmitting and receiving. The nominal slot
length is 625 s . A packet nominally covers a single slot, but can be extended to cover
three or five slots, as depicted in Figure 4. In multi-slot packets the frequency remains the
same until the entire packet is sent. When using a multi-slot packet, the data rate is higher
because the header and a 220 s long switching time after the packet are needed only
once in each packet. On the other hand, the robustness is reduced: in a crowded
environment the long packets will more probably be lost.
Every Bluetooth unit has an internal system clock, which determines the timing
and hopping of the transceiver. The Bluetooth clock is derived from a free running
nativeclock, which is never adjusted and is never turned off. For synchronization with
otherunits, only offsets are used. These offsets, when added to the native clock,
providetemporary Bluetooth clocks,which are mutually synchronized. The Bluetooth
clock hasno relation to the time of day and can therefore be initialized to any value. The
Bluetooth clock provides the heart beat of the Bluetooth transceiver. Its resolution is at
least half the TX or RX slot length, or 312.5 s. The Bluetooth clock has a cycle of
about a day. If the clock is implemented with a counter, a 28-bit counter is required that
wraps around at 2 28 -1. The LSB ticks in units of 312.5 s, giving a clock rate of 3.2
KHz.
Applications
Home
The Three-in-one Phone
With Bluetooth support, one handset will be able to provide multiple functionality.
Whenat home, the phone functions as a cordless phone, connected to the fixed line. When
onthe move, it functions as a mobile phone connected to the mobile network.
Additionally,when the phone comes within range of another mobile phone with built-in
Bluetoothtechnology, it functions as a walkie-talkie.
Smart Home
Homes equipped with Bluetooth devices may be able to recognise the arrival of
itsbonafide residents and unlock the door on their arrival. The device will also adjust
heatto a preset temperature. While this is happening, the data from the individual’s
PDAmay be exchanged with the home electronic board, and the family calendar is
updatedto reflect the scheduled activities in the office.
Office
The Automatic Synchronizer
The Bluetooth technology will also allow automatic synchronization of the
desktop,mobile computer, PDAs and the mobilephone. For instance, as soon as one
entershis/her office the address list and calendar in the PDA will automatically be
updated toagree with the one in the desktop, or vice versa.
Travelers
Automatic Check-in
The Bluetooth enabled mobile phone or the PDA can present the electronic ticket to
theairline system without one having to go through the queue at the check-in
counters.The airline's on-line system performs the identification via the ID-tag feature
built intothe mobile phone or the PDA and confirms the reserved seat.In the airport
waiting lounge, kiosks could be equipped with Bluetooth-enabled Internetports. Via these
ports, one could connect the Bluetooth-enabled laptops, PDAs, and other devicesto access
the office or home-based servers via the airline server. Theairlines may also provide free
Internet voice call using voice-over IP.
HomeRF
The HomeRF Shared Wireless Access Protocol (SWAP) system is designed to carry both
voice and data traffic and to inter-operate with the Public Switched Telephone Network
(PSTN) and the Internet. Like Bluetooth, it also operates in the 2.4 GHz band and uses a
digital frequency hopping spread spectrum radio. The SWAP technology was derived
from extensions of existing cordless telephone (Digital Enhanced Cordless Telephone or
DECT ) and wireless LAN technology to enable a new class of home cordless services.
SWAP supports both a TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access) service to provide
delivery of interactive voice and other time-critical services, and a CSMA/CA (Carrier
Sense Multiple Access/Collision Avoidance) service for delivery of high-speed packet
data. The HomeRF devices operate in a frequency-hopping network with a hop frequency
of 50 hops/s. The typical power consumption of these devices is about 100mW. The data
rates supported are 1 Mbps or 2 Mbps, depending on the modulation techniques used.
The typical use of this technology is within the home, and the network can support up to
127 devices. The HomeRF network can support upto 6 full duplex voice channels. It also
has provision for data security and compression. Each HomeRF device has a 48-bit
node ID that allows concurrent operation of multiple co-located networks.
Summary
References
1. Specification of the Bluetooth System v 1.0 B, Volume 1, Core. Bluetooth Special
Interest Group, December 1999
2. Specification of the Bluetooth System v 1.0 B, Volume 2, Profiles, Bluetooth Special
Interest Group, December 1999
3. IrDA Object Exchange Protocol, IrOBEX, Version 1.2, Infrared Data Association,
March 1999
4. A Wireless Connectivity Technologies Comparison, Infrared and Radio Frequency,
Infrared Data Association, September 1998
5. The Official Bluetooth Site, http://www.bluetooth.com
6. http://www.intel.com/mobile/bluetooth/
7. HomeRF Working Group Site, http://www.homerf.org/