119 research outputs found

    The survey on Near Field Communication

    Get PDF
    PubMed ID: 26057043Near Field Communication (NFC) is an emerging short-range wireless communication technology that offers great and varied promise in services such as payment, ticketing, gaming, crowd sourcing, voting, navigation, and many others. NFC technology enables the integration of services from a wide range of applications into one single smartphone. NFC technology has emerged recently, and consequently not much academic data are available yet, although the number of academic research studies carried out in the past two years has already surpassed the total number of the prior works combined. This paper presents the concept of NFC technology in a holistic approach from different perspectives, including hardware improvement and optimization, communication essentials and standards, applications, secure elements, privacy and security, usability analysis, and ecosystem and business issues. Further research opportunities in terms of the academic and business points of view are also explored and discussed at the end of each section. This comprehensive survey will be a valuable guide for researchers and academicians, as well as for business in the NFC technology and ecosystem.Publisher's Versio

    Near-Field Communications: A Comprehensive Survey

    Full text link
    Multiple-antenna technologies are evolving towards large-scale aperture sizes, extremely high frequencies, and innovative antenna types. This evolution is giving rise to the emergence of near-field communications (NFC) in future wireless systems. Considerable attention has been directed towards this cutting-edge technology due to its potential to enhance the capacity of wireless networks by introducing increased spatial degrees of freedom (DoFs) in the range domain. Within this context, a comprehensive review of the state of the art on NFC is presented, with a specific focus on its 1) fundamental operating principles, 2) channel modeling, 3) performance analysis, 4) signal processing, and 5) integration with other emerging technologies. Specifically, 1) the basic principles of NFC are characterized from both physics and communications perspectives, unveiling its unique properties in contrast to far-field communications. 2) Based on these principles, deterministic and stochastic near-field channel models are investigated for spatially-discrete (SPD) and continuous-aperture (CAP) antenna arrays. 3) Rooted in these models, existing contributions on near-field performance analysis are reviewed in terms of DoFs/effective DoFs (EDoFs), power scaling law, and transmission rate. 4) Existing signal processing techniques for NFC are systematically surveyed, encompassing channel estimation, beamforming design, and low-complexity beam training. 5) Major issues and research opportunities associated with the integration of NFC and other emerging technologies are identified to facilitate NFC applications in next-generation networks. Promising directions are highlighted throughout the paper to inspire future research endeavors in the realm of NFC.Comment: 56 pages, 23figures; submit for possible journa

    Comparative analysis of energy transfer mechanisms for neural implants

    Get PDF
    As neural implant technologies advance rapidly, a nuanced understanding of their powering mechanisms becomes indispensable, especially given the long-term biocompatibility risks like oxidative stress and inflammation, which can be aggravated by recurrent surgeries, including battery replacements. This review delves into a comprehensive analysis, starting with biocompatibility considerations for both energy storage units and transfer methods. The review focuses on four main mechanisms for powering neural implants: Electromagnetic, Acoustic, Optical, and Direct Connection to the Body. Among these, Electromagnetic Methods include techniques such as Near-Field Communication (RF). Acoustic methods using high-frequency ultrasound offer advantages in power transmission efficiency and multi-node interrogation capabilities. Optical methods, although still in early development, show promising energy transmission efficiencies using Near-Infrared (NIR) light while avoiding electromagnetic interference. Direct connections, while efficient, pose substantial safety risks, including infection and micromotion disturbances within neural tissue. The review employs key metrics such as specific absorption rate (SAR) and energy transfer efficiency for a nuanced evaluation of these methods. It also discusses recent innovations like the Sectored-Multi Ring Ultrasonic Transducer (S-MRUT), Stentrode, and Neural Dust. Ultimately, this review aims to help researchers, clinicians, and engineers better understand the challenges of and potentially create new solutions for powering neural implants

    New Waves of IoT Technologies Research – Transcending Intelligence and Senses at the Edge to Create Multi Experience Environments

    Get PDF
    The next wave of Internet of Things (IoT) and Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) brings new technological developments that incorporate radical advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI), edge computing processing, new sensing capabilities, more security protection and autonomous functions accelerating progress towards the ability for IoT systems to self-develop, self-maintain and self-optimise. The emergence of hyper autonomous IoT applications with enhanced sensing, distributed intelligence, edge processing and connectivity, combined with human augmentation, has the potential to power the transformation and optimisation of industrial sectors and to change the innovation landscape. This chapter is reviewing the most recent advances in the next wave of the IoT by looking not only at the technology enabling the IoT but also at the platforms and smart data aspects that will bring intelligence, sustainability, dependability, autonomy, and will support human-centric solutions.acceptedVersio

    Antenna sensing for wearable applications

    Get PDF
    As wearable technologies are growing fast, there is emerging trend to increase functionality of the devices. Antennas which are primarily component in communication systems can offer attractive route forward to minimize the number of components functioning as a sensing element for wearable and flexible electronics. Toward development of flexible antenna as sensing element, this thesis investigates the development of the flexible and printed sensing NFC RFID tag. In this approach, the sensor measurement is supported by the internal sensor and analog-to-digital convertor (ADC) of the NFC transponder. Design optimisation, fabrication and characterization of the printed antenna are described. Besides, the printed antenna, NFC transponder and two simple resistive sensors are integrated to form a fully flexible sensing RFID tag demonstrating applicability in food and health monitoring. This thesis also presents development of two antenna sensors by using functional materials: (i) An inductor-capacitor (LC) resonant tank based wireless pressure sensor on electrospun Poly-L-lactide (PLLA) nanofibers-based substrate. The screen-printed resonant tank (resonant frequency of ~13.56 MHz) consists of a planar inductor connected in parallel with an interdigitated capacitor. Since the substrates is piezoelectric, the capacitance of the interdigitated capacitor varies in response to the applied pressure. To demonstrate a potential application of developed pressure sensor, it was integrated on a compression bandage to monitor sub-bandage pressure. (ii) To investigate the realization of sensing antenna as temperature sensor simple loop antenna is designed and in this study unlike the first study that the sensing element was the substrate, the conductive body of the antenna itself is considered as a functional material. In this case, a small part of a loop antenna which originally was printed using silver paste is replaced by Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene): polystyrene (PEDOT: PSS). The sensing mechanism is based on the resonant frequency shift by varying temperature. While using functional materials is useful for realization of antenna sensor, another approach also is presented by developing stretchable textile-based microstrip antennas on deformable substrate which can measure joint angles of a human limb. The EM characteristics of the meshed patch antenna were compared with its metallic counterpart fabricated with lithography technique. Moreover, the concept of stretchable UHF RFID-based strain sensor is touched in the final part of this thesis

    Langattoman tehtävädatansiirtojärjestelmän suunnittelu lentokoneympäristöön

    Get PDF
    This thesis is about designing wireless mission data transfer system for the Finnish Air Force's Grob 115E elementary training aircraft. This thesis explains the use case of the mission data system, and how the wireless implementation for the mission data transfer would change the operation. The target was to design a system that is capable of transferring data wirelessly between the ground station and the Grob aircraft. The biggest challenge for the implementation was the vast amount of data that was needed to be transferred from the aircraft to the ground station after the flight. Also, the time window during which the transfer had to be completed was very limited. Two WLAN standards, IEEE's 802.11ac and 802.11ax were considered as potential techniques for the implementation. In this thesis the WLAN security was also examined, and two additional methods outside of WLAN standards were suggested for gaining better security for the data transmission. Wireless system utilizing the 802.11ac standard was tested and OpenSSH and OpenVPN were examined as potential techniques to strengthen the communication security. The results showed that the 802.11ac standard performs well with the communication distances of the wireless mission data transfer system. 802.11ac however has one drawback that will reduce its potential as the communication standard for the task

    Securing Wireless Communications of the Internet of Things from the Physical Layer, An Overview

    Get PDF
    The security of the Internet of Things (IoT) is receiving considerable interest as the low power constraints and complexity features of many IoT devices are limiting the use of conventional cryptographic techniques. This article provides an overview of recent research efforts on alternative approaches for securing IoT wireless communications at the physical layer, specifically the key topics of key generation and physical layer encryption. These schemes can be implemented and are lightweight, and thus offer practical solutions for providing effective IoT wireless security. Future research to make IoT-based physical layer security more robust and pervasive is also covered

    From serendipity to sustainable Green IoT: technical, industrial and political perspective

    Get PDF
    Recently, Internet of Things (IoT) has become one of the largest electronics market for hardware production due to its fast evolving application space. However, one of the key challenges for IoT hardware is the energy efficiency as most of IoT devices/objects are expected to run on batteries for months/years without a battery replacement or on harvested energy sources. Widespread use of IoT has also led to a largescale rise in the carbon footprint. In this regard, academia, industry and policy-makers are constantly working towards new energy-efficient hardware and software solutions paving the way for an emerging area referred to as green-IoT. With the direct integration and the evolution of smart communication between physical world and computer-based systems, IoT devices are also expected to reduce the total amount of energy consumption for the Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) sector. However, in order to increase its chance of success and to help at reducing the overall energy consumption and carbon emissions a comprehensive investigation into how to achieve green-IoT is required. In this context, this paper surveys the green perspective of the IoT paradigm and aims to contribute at establishing a global approach for green-IoT environments. A comprehensive approach is presented that focuses not only on the specific solutions but also on the interaction among them, and highlights the precautions/decisions the policy makers need to take. On one side, the ongoing European projects and standardization efforts as well as industry and academia based solutions are presented and on the other side, the challenges, open issues, lessons learned and the role of policymakers towards green-IoT are discussed. The survey shows that due to many existing open issues (e.g., technical considerations, lack of standardization, security and privacy, governance and legislation, etc.) that still need to be addressed, a realistic implementation of a sustainable green-IoT environment that could be universally accepted and deployed, is still missing
    corecore