Title :
Every smart phone is a backscatter reader: Modulated backscatter compatibility with Bluetooth 4.0 Low Energy (BLE) devices
Author :
Ensworth, Joshua F. ; Reynolds, Matthew S.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Abstract :
In this work, we show how modulated backscatter signals can be crafted to yield channelized band-pass signals akin to those transmitted by many conventional wireless devices. As a result, conventional wireless devices can receive these backscattered signals without any modification (neither hardware nor software) to the conventional wireless device. We present a proof of concept using the Bluetooth 4.0 Low Energy, or BLE, standard widely available on smart phones and mobile devices. Our prototype backscatter tag produces three-channel bandpass frequency shift keying (FSK) packets at 1 Mbps that are indistinguishable from conventional BLE advertising packets. An unmodified Apple iPad is shown to correctly receive and display these packets at a range of over 9.4 m using its existing iOS Bluetooth stack with no changes whatsoever. We create all three BLE channels by backscattering a single incident CW carrier using a novel combination of fundamentalmode and harmonic-mode backscatter subcarrier modulation, with two of the band-pass channels generated by the fundamental mode and one of the band-pass channels generated by the second harmonic mode. The backscatter modulator consumes only 28.4 pJ/bit, compared with over 10 nJ/bit for conventional BLE transmitters. The backscatter approach yields over 100X lower energy per bit than a conventional BLE transmitter, while retaining compatibility with billions of existing Bluetooth enabled smartphones and mobile devices.
Keywords :
Bluetooth; backscatter; frequency shift keying; smart phones; Apple iPad; BLE devices; Bluetooth 4.0 low energy; FSK packets; advertising packets; backscatter modulator; backscatter reader; backscatter signals; backscattered signals; bandpass channels; channelized bandpass signals; conventional BLE transmitter; frequency shift keying; harmonic mode backscatter subcarrier modulation; iOS Bluetooth stack; mobile devices; modulated backscatter compatibility; prototype backscatter tag; second harmonic mode; smart phone; wireless device; wireless devices; Advertising; Backscatter; Frequency shift keying; IEEE 802.11 Standards; Radiofrequency identification; BLE; Backscatter; Internet of Things; RFID; Wireless; Wireless Sensor Network; iBeacon;
Conference_Titel :
RFID (RFID), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
DOI :
10.1109/RFID.2015.7113076