Achieving deterministic and low-latency wireless connection with zero-wire
Author(s) -
Fan Yang,
Jonathan Oostvogels,
Sam Michiels,
Danny Hughes
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
lirias (ku leuven)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/3384419.3430406
Subject(s) - goodput , computer science , jitter , latency (audio) , computer network , wireless , mesh networking , low latency (capital markets) , wireless mesh network , optical wireless , wireless network , throughput , telecommunications
Despite the ubiquitous deployment and development of wireless technology for the Internet of Things (IoT), contemporary radio frequency (RF)-based solutions still cannot match the performance of a "wire" in terms of latency and throughput. This abstract presents a demonstration of Zero-Wire, a novel optical wireless approach that addresses this gap to enable latency-sensitive IoT applications. The essence of this approach is a new networking paradigm, referred to as a symbol-synchronous bus, wherein a mesh of nodes concurrently transmits optical signals. The demonstration setup is composed of 25 Zero-Wire nodes, forming a mesh network, and the demo showcases the network's behavior during a series of transmissions. End-to-end performance measurements include 19 kbps of contention-agnostic goodput, latency under 1 ms for two-byte frames, jitter on the order of 10s of μs, and a base reliability of 99%.
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