Title: Review Safety Test
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6Wireless Technology
- Wireless devices transmit information via
Electromagnetic waves - Early wireless devices
- Radios often called wireless in old WWII movies
- Broadcast TV
- TV remote controls
- Garage door openers
7Wireless technology
- Todays wireless devices include
- Mobile phones
- Satellite TV
- Satellite radio
- Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
- Bluetooth devices
- Wi-Fi systems
- RFID tags
8Smart phones dominate cellular systems today
9Apple iPhone A computer that is also a cell phone
10Mobile Phone (Cellular) Systems
- Mobile phones are two-way radios. They transmit
and receive RF signals. Old style phones are not
radios. - Original mobile phones used a single large
central antenna and had limited channels
available to carry signals. Only a small number
of mobile phones were available in a city due to
the limited amount of usable frequency bands. - Cellular technology allowed for a near limitless
number of mobile phones to operate in a city.
11Mobile Phone (Cellular) Systems
- Cellular systems operate at a frequency of 824 to
894 Mhz, and 1850 to 1990 Mhz . Other bands are
also being used as demand increases. - These frequency bands are controlled by the
Federal government. - The original cell phones operated at 824-894 MHz.
Sometimes these phones are referred to as
analog phones since digital technology had not
yet been developed. - Many systems today operate at 1850 to 1990 Mhz,
the PCS band in the digital mode but can also
operate at the lower frequency band. These
phones are called dual band phones. - The term cellular refers to the fact that
service areas are divided into cells typically
1- 10 miles apart. Cell size is dependent on the
population density of the area. Large population
areas require closer spaced cells. - Each cellular company has their own towers, thus
the large number of towers throughout the area.
Sometimes towers will have multiple sets for the
same system or multiple systems.
12PCS Band 1850-1990 MHZ
13Grid pattern for cellular antenna
Adjacent grids do not use the same frequency
14Mobile Phone (Cellular) Systems
- Each phone has a unique code.
- If your cell phone is on, it is transmitting a
signal to the nearest cell tower. - This signal locates you and allows you to receive
calls. - It also identifies your phone, carrier, and
status of your account. - When you make a call, it is transmitted to the
nearest tower and it is then routed to the person
you called. - The call may go via radio waves, land lines, or
satellite. - As you move, the call can be transferred to the
next cell. This is done automatically as signal
strength changes - Phones typically transmit with around 600mW of
power.
15Base station RF transmit/receive modules
Typical cellular system antenna tower with two
sets of base station modules
16Large cell phone antenna is a remote location
17Communities are trying to disguise cellular towers
Several cell phone antenna towers like this are
near the campus
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20 Bluetooth
- Bluetooth named after a Swedish King that
united the country. First proposed by Ericsson - The systems utilizes an unregulated band of
frequencies at 2.4 GHz that operate on a
relatively short distance, about 10m. - Bluetooth uses a frequency hop transceiver to
handle device traffic. A radio channel is shared
by a group of devices and is synchronized by one
device known as the master. This forms a piconet. - Bluetooth devices can be used to connect a
headset to a cellular phone, a printer to a
computer, a digital camera to a computer, etc. - Because Bluetooth circuits are low power with
low battery requirements, the chipsets are
relatively inexpensive. - Many newer devices have Bluetooth already built
into them.
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22Wi-Fi provides access to internet wirelessly
- Uses IEEE standard 802.11
- Transmits at
- 2.4 GHz (802.11b and 802.11g)
- 5.0 GHz (802.11a)
- Transfer Rates
- 802.11a and 802.11g (54 Megabits per second)
- 802.11b (11 Mega bits per second)
- Frequency hopping for security
- Range about 100 meters (300 feet)
- Range limited by output power level.
- Often called a Hotspot
23Installing a home Wi-Fi network is easy and cheap
24A city wide Wi-Fi zone can be created using
multiple routers similar to the cell phone
antenna network
25Bluetooth vs. Wi-Fi
- Both use the 2.4 GHz frequency band
- Both could use the same antenna
- Bluetooth is for short range, about 10m
- Wi-Fi has a longer range, about 100m
- Bluetooth can operate from a small battery
- Wi-Fi requires higher power, usually plugs into a
home electrical outlet
26Instead of using a Wi-Fi location, you can access
the internet through the cellular phone network
BUT you will pay for the time. Could be
expensive unless you have unlimited data downloads
Allows for your laptop to access the internet via
the cellular system
27Smart phones can access the internet either
through a local Wi-Fi access point or the
cellphone network
28RFID tags
- Passive -uses the incoming signal for power to
transmit - Active- requires an internal power supply, more
expensive and less widely used - Could replace bar codes and security attachments
on merchandise - Implantable for medical and security data
29Implantable RFID device
30Companies like Wal-Mart plan to use RFID
extensively
31RFID gate access at UNCC
32GPS systems uses orbiting satellites The primary
frequency of operation is 1575.42 MHz with a
secondary frequency of 1227.6 MHz
- Cellular GPS systems use local cellular antennas
33Stationary Satellites Orbit the Earth
34GPS devices calculate the signal time from each
satellite and using triangulation determine
location
35Antenna Design
- In antenna design, an important design parameter
is the wavelength of the EM wave - Wavelength is a function of frequency
- Antenna length is typically either
- 1 wavelength
- ¼ wavelength
- ½ wavelength
36Frequency vs wavelength
Wavelength
37Wavelength Calculations
- Wavelength units
- l (wavelength) m/cycle
- f (frequency) cycles/sec hertz
- c (speed of light) m/sec 3.0 x 108 m/sec
- Wavelength equation
- l c / f
- m/cycle (m/sec) / (cycles/sec)
- Frequency must be converted to Hz
38Sample calculation
- Find the wavelength of a frequency of 850 MHz
- Convert 850 MHz to Hz
- 850 MHz 850 x 106 Hz 8.50 x 108 Hz
- Use wavelength equation
- l c/f where c speed of light 3.0 x 108
m/sec - l (3.0 x 108 m/sec ) / (8.50 x 108 cycles/sec)
- l .353 m/cycle
- Convert to cm gives
- l 35.3 cm/cycle
- For a ¼ wavelength antenna (35.3cm/cycle)/48.82
5cm/cycle
39Assignment due next class
- HW 7 from the web site
- Frequency and wavelength work sheet
- Short multiple choice test next class on all
lectures to date including the frequency/wavelengt
h work sheet