Difference between revisions of "Smartphone Wireless"

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(RFID)
(Terminology)
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* HF = High Frequency
 
* HF = High Frequency
 
* UHF = Ultra High Frequency
 
* UHF = Ultra High Frequency
* IR = Infrared
+
* IR = Infrared - typically read by a IR sensor, but can also be an IR camera
 
* Light is even higher, but that is handled by the camera and not radios
 
* Light is even higher, but that is handled by the camera and not radios
 
* Exciter = an antenna that is designed to send energy to a passive RFID tag
 
* Exciter = an antenna that is designed to send energy to a passive RFID tag

Revision as of 19:07, 20 December 2020

Full Title or Meme

There are a large number of radios on a Smartphone. This wiki looks at those that are not part of the cellular network.

Context

Terminology

  • RF = Radio Frequency
  • HF = High Frequency
  • UHF = Ultra High Frequency
  • IR = Infrared - typically read by a IR sensor, but can also be an IR camera
  • Light is even higher, but that is handled by the camera and not radios
  • Exciter = an antenna that is designed to send energy to a passive RFID tag

Existing Bands

RFID

RF Identifier

  • Passive = no battery, typically a tag applied to a inventory item - read range has been 12-15 originally now 30+ feet
  • Battery Assisted Passive = typically a monitored sensor that is polled by RF
  • Active = has batter and dual antenna - read range 300 feet
  • Low Frequency 120 to 150 kHz. - near touch scanning
  • HF/NFC 13.56 MHz - range in centimeters
  • UHF = 300 MHz to 3 GHz - older
  • UHF Gen2 = 860 to 960 MHz - range several meters (works through rain)

NFC

Near Field Communications

  • Apple Pay
  • Android Pay
  • Smart card with build in antenna
  • 13.56 MHz

BLE

Bluetooth low energy + battery powered

  • Also excited by a stationary antenna that causes the smartphone to respond
  • Needs to have an app on a smartphone that is powered up and has bluetooth enabled that responds to the message with a UUID
  • Operations at 2.4 GHz at about 70 meters between device and anttenna.


WiFi

Generally used for local internet connections. Can also be enabled by one of the above to send a UUID.

References