4.5 Article

Enabling Cross-technology Communication from LoRa to ZigBee in the 2.4 GHz Band

Journal

ACM TRANSACTIONS ON SENSOR NETWORKS
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/3491222

Keywords

Cross-technology communication; LoRa; ZigBee; wireless sensor-actuator networks

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CNS-1657275, CNS-2046538, CNS-2150010]

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IEEE 802.15.4-based wireless sensor-actuator networks play a significant role in improving industrial efficiency, but managing large and complex networks is difficult. This article presents a solution for enabling cross-technology communication from LoRa to ZigBee, providing reliable communication with high throughput and low bit error rate.
IEEE 802.15.4-based wireless sensor-actuator networks have been widely adopted by process industries in recent years because of their significant role in improving industrial efficiency and reducing operating costs. Today, industrial wireless sensor-actuator networks are becoming tremendously larger and more complex than before. However, a large, complex mesh network is hard to manage and inelastic to change once the network is deployed. In addition, flooding-based time synchronization and information dissemination introduce significant communication overhead to the network. More importantly, the deliveries of urgent and critical information such as emergency alarms suffer long delays, because those messages must go through the hopby-hop transport. A promising solution to overcome those limitations is to enable the direct messaging from a long-range radio to an IEEE 802.15.4 radio. Then messages can be delivered to all field devices in a singlehop fashion. This article presents our study on enabling the cross-technology communication from LoRa to ZigBee using the energy emission of the LoRa radio as the carrier to deliver information. Experimental results show that our cross-technology communication approach provides reliable communication from LoRa to ZigBee with the throughput of up to 576.80 bps and the bit error rate of up to 5.23% in the 2.4 GHz band.

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