Bluetooth Technology
Bluetooth Technology
Bluetooth Technology
(using short wavelength radio transmissions) from fixed and mobile devices,creating personal
area networks (PANs) with high levels of security. Created by telecoms vendor Ericsson in
1994,[1]it was originally conceived as a wireless alternative to RS-232 data cables. It can
connect several devices, overcoming problems of synchronization. Today Bluetooth is
managed by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group.
Implementation:
Bluetooth uses a radio technology called frequency-hopping spread spectrum, which
chops up the data being sent and transmits chunks of it on up to 79 bands (1 MHz
each) in the range 2402-2480 MHz. This is in the globally unlicensed Industrial,
Scientific and Medical (ISM) 2.4 GHz short-range radio frequency band.
In Classic Bluetooth, which is also referred to as basic rate (BR) mode, the
modulation is Gaussian frequency-shift keying (GFSK). It can achieve a gross data
rate of 1 Mbit/s. In extended data rate (EDR) π/4-DQPSK and 8DPSK are used,
giving 2, and 3 Mbit/s respectively.
At any given time, data can be transferred between the master and one other device.
The Bluetooth Core Specification allows connecting two or more piconets together to
form a scatternet, with some devices acting as a bridge by simultaneously playing
the master role in one piconet and the slave role in another.
Many USB Bluetooth adapters or "dongles" are available, some of which also include
an IrDA adapter. Older (pre-2003) Bluetooth dongles, however, have limited
services, offering only the Bluetooth Enumerator and a less-powerful Bluetooth
Radio incarnation. Such devices can link computers with Bluetooth with a distance of
100 meters, but they do not offer much in the way of services that modern adapters
do.
Uses:
Bluetooth is a standard communications protocol primarily designed for low
power consumption, with a short range (power-class-dependent: 100 m, 10 m
and 1 m, but ranges vary in practice; see table below) based on low-
cost transceiver microchips in each device.[6] Because the devices use a radio
(broadcast) communications system, they do not have to be in line of sight of
each other.[5]
Maximum Permitted
Power
Range
Class
(approximate)
mW dBm
Class 1 100 20 ~100 meters
Class 3 1 0 ~1 meters
In most cases the effective range of class 2 devices is extended if they connect to a
class 1 transceiver, compared to a pure class 2 network. This is accomplished by the
higher sensitivity and transmission power of Class 1 devices.[7]
Version 2.0 +
3 Mbit/s
EDR
While the Bluetooth Core Specification does mandate minimums for range, the range
of the technology is application specific and is not limited. Manufacturers may tune
their implementations to the range needed to support individual use cases.
List of applications:
Bluetooth Specifications:
Bluetooth devices in a piconet share a common communication data channel.
The channel has a total capacity of 1 megabit per second (Mbps). Headers and
handshaking information consume about 20 percent of this capacity.
In the United States and Europe, the frequency range is 2,400 to 2,483.5
MHz, with 79 1-MHz radio frequency (RF) channels. In practice, the range is 2,402
MHz to 2,480 MHz. In Japan, the frequency range is 2,472 to 2,497 MHz with 23 1-
MHz RF channels.
A data channel hops randomly 1,600 times per second between the 79 (or 23)
RF channels.
A piconet has a master and up to seven slaves. The master transmits in even
time slots, slaves in odd time slots.
There are currently two types of data transfer between devices: SCO
(synchronous connection oriented) and ACL (asynchronous connectionless).
In a piconet, there can be up to three SCO links of 64,000 bits per second
each. To avoid timing and collision problems, the SCO links use reserved slots set
up by the master.
Masters can support up to three SCO links with one, two or three slaves.
Slots not reserved for SCO links can be used for ACL links.
One master and slave can have a single ACL link.
Bluetooth devices:
A Bluetooth USB dongle with a 100 m range. The MacBook Pro, shown, also has a
built in Bluetooth adaptor.
Bluetooth protocols simplify the discovery and setup of services between devices.
[citation needed]
Bluetooth devices can advertise all of the services they provide.[citation
needed]
This makes using services easier because more of the security, network
address and permission configuration can be automated than with many other
network types.
Bluetooth low energy:
Bluetooth low energy is an enhancement to the Bluetooth standard that was
introduced in Bluetooth v4.0. It allows two types of implementation, dual-mode and
single-mode. In a dual-mode implementation, Bluetooth low energy functionality is
integrated into an existing Classic Bluetooth controller. The resulting architecture
shares much of Classic Bluetooth’s existing radio and functionality resulting in a
minimal cost increase compared to Classic Bluetooth. Additionally, manufacturers
can use current Classic Bluetooth (Bluetooth v2.1 + EDR or Bluetooth v3.0 + HS)
chips with the new low energy stack, enhancing the development of Classic
Bluetooth enabled devices with new capabilities.
Single-mode chips, which will enable highly integrated and compact devices, will
feature a lightweight Link Layer providing ultra-low power idle mode operation,
simple device discovery, and reliable point-to-multipoint data transfer with advanced
power-save and secure encrypted connections at the lowest possible cost. The Link
Layer in these controllers will enable Internet connected sensors to schedule
Bluetooth low energy traffic between Bluetooth transmissions.
Expected use cases for Bluetooth low energy technology include sports and fitness,
security and proximity and smart energy. Bluetooth low energy technology is
designed for devices to have a battery life of up to one year such as those powered
by coin-cell batteries. These types of devices include watches that will use Bluetooth
low energy technology to display Caller ID information and sports sensors that will be
used to monitor the wearer's heart rate during exercise. The Medical Devices
Working Group of the Bluetooth SIG is also creating a medical devices profile and
associated protocols to enable Bluetooth applications for this vertical market.
Future Broadcast channel:
Enables Bluetooth information points. This will drive the adoption of Bluetooth
into mobile phones, and enable advertising models based on users pulling
information from the information points, and not based on the object push
model that is used in a limited way today.
Topology management:
Enables the automatic configuration of the piconet topologies especially
in scatternet situations that are becoming more common today. This should all
be invisible to users of the technology, while also making the technology "just
work."
QoS improvements:
Enable audio and video data to be transmitted at a higher quality, especially
when best effort traffic is being transmitted in the same piconet.