124 research outputs found

    iBeacon localization

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    Étude et positionnement utilisant le réseau de capteur sans fil dans un environnement minier souterrain

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    La sécurité et la communication posent des problèmes majeurs auxquels il faut remédier dans les environnements hostiles comme les mines souterraines. Pour une communication fiable ainsi que pour tracer la position exacte d’un objet dans les mines souterraines, différentes technologies ont été déployé. Parmi ces dernières, le réseau de capteurs sans fil est considéré comme un outil prometteur pour les applications basées sur la localisation, à savoir, la surveillance des lieux, le repérage des mobiles et la navigation. En fait, les réseaux de capteur sans-fil fournissent une couverture d’une vaste gamme d’équipements fiables, efficaces, tolérants aux défaillances et évolutives. Cependant, les travaux de recherches précédents ont divisé la localisation en deux parties: les méthodes basées sur la portée et celles non-basées sur la portée. Où la première est précise et coûteuse tandis que la deuxième est présentée pour réduire la quantité d’énergie consommée du côté capteur dont les ressources sont limitées. Notre recherche se focalise sur la localisation basée sur la portée utilisant le réseau de capteurs sans fil dans les milieux internes et mines souterrains. Plusieurs techniques ont été proposées pour la localisation comme la réception de l'indicateur de force de signal (RSSI), le temps d'arrivée (TOA), la différence de temps d'arrivée (TDOA), l'angle d'arrivée (AOA). Bien que plusieurs travaux de recherches utilisant ces techniques aient été exécutés, l'approche de localisation à base de temps pour les environnements complexe comme la mine souterraine demeure limitée. Cette thèse offre de nouvelles solutions pour combler l’écart entre la localisation à base de temps et le réseau de capteurs sans fil à haute précision, pour l’environnement minier souterrain. De plus, nous avons utilisé une technologie émergente, à savoir les communications ultra-large bande, pour booster la performance et l'exactitude. Notre travail de recherche est subdivisé en deux principales parties : une partie simulation et une partie pratique. Dans la première, nous avons utilisé MATLAB pour faire les différentes simulations. La deuxième partie consiste en plusieurs mesures pratiques réalisées dans un environnement intérieur ainsi que dans une mine souterraine. Les résultats montrent une amélioration remarquable et une meilleure précision de la technique UWB à base de temps

    Sensor Fusion for Mobile Robot Localization using UWB and ArUco Markers

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    Uma das principais características para considerar um robô autónomo é o facto de este ser capaz de se localizar, em tempo real, no seu ambiente, ou seja saber a sua posição e orientação. Esta é uma área desafiante que tem sido estudada por diversos investigadores em todo o mundo. Para obter a localização de um robô é possível recorrer a diferentes metodologias. No entanto há metodologias que apresentam problemas em diferentes circunstâncias, como é o caso da odometria que sofre de acumulação de erros com a distância percorrida pelo robô. Outro problema existente em diversas metodologias é a incerteza na deteção do robô devido a ruído presente nos sensores. Com o intuito de obter uma localização mais robusta do robô e mais tolerante a falhas é possível combinar diversos sistemas de localização, combinando assim as vantagens de cada um deles. Neste trabalho, será utilizado o sistema Pozyx, uma solução de baixo custo que fornece informação de posicionamento com o auxílio da tecnologia Ultra-WideBand Time-of-Flight (UWB ToF). Também serão utilizados marcadores ArUco colocados no ambiente que através da sua identificação por uma câmara é também possível obter informação de posicionamento. Estas duas soluções irão ser estudadas e implementadas num robô móvel, através de um esquema de localização baseada em marcadores. Primeiramente, irá ser feita uma caracterização do erro de ambos os sistemas, uma vez que as medidas não são perfeitas, havendo sempre algum ruído nas medições. De seguida, as medidas fornecidas pelos sistemas irão ser filtradas e fundidas com os valores da odometria do robô através da implementação de um Filtro de Kalman Extendido (EKF). Assim, é possível obter a pose do robô (posição e orientação), pose esta que é comparada com a pose fornecida por um sistema de Ground-Truth igualmente desenvolvido para este trabalho com o auxílio da libraria ArUco, percebendo assim a precisão do algoritmo desenvolvido. O trabalho desenvolvido mostrou que com a utilização do sistema Pozyx e dos marcadores ArUco é possível melhorar a localização do robô, o que significa que é uma solução adequada e eficaz para este fim.One of the main characteristics to consider a robot truly autonomous is the fact that it is able to locate itself, in real time, in its environment, that is, to know its position and orientation. This is a challenging area that has been studied by several researchers around the world. To obtain the localization of a robot it is possible to use different methodologies. However, there are methodologies that present problems in different circumstances, as is the case of odometry that suffers from error accumulation with the distance traveled by the robot. Another problem existing in several methodologies is the uncertainty in the sensing of the robot due to noise present in the sensors. In order to obtain a more robust localization of the robot and more fault tolerant it is possible to combine several localization systems, thus combining the advantages of each one. In this work, the Pozyx system will be used, a low-cost solution that provides positioning information through Ultra-WideBand Time-of-Flight (UWB ToF) technology. It will also be used ArUco markers placed in the environment that through their identification by a camera it is also possible to obtain positioning information. These two solutions will be studied and implemented in a mobile robot, through a beacon-based localization scheme. First, an error characterization of both systems will be performed, since the measurements are not perfect, and there is always some noise in the measurements. Next, the measurements provided by the systems will be filtered and fused with the robot's odometry values by the implementation of an Extended Kalman Filter (EKF). In this way, it is possible to obtain the robot's pose, i.e position and orientation, which is compared with the pose provided by a Ground-Truth system also developed for this work with the aid of the ArUco library, thus realizing the accuracy of the developed algorithm. The developed work showed that with the use of the Pozyx system and ArUco markers it is possible to improve the robot localization, meaning that it is an adequate and effective solution for this purpose

    Slocalization: Sub-{\mu}W Ultra Wideband Backscatter Localization

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    Ultra wideband technology has shown great promise for providing high-quality location estimation, even in complex indoor multipath environments, but existing ultra wideband systems require tens to hundreds of milliwatts during operation. Backscatter communication has demonstrated the viability of astonishingly low-power tags, but has thus far been restricted to narrowband systems with low localization resolution. The challenge to combining these complimentary technologies is that they share a compounding limitation, constrained transmit power. Regulations limit ultra wideband transmissions to just -41.3 dBm/MHz, and a backscatter device can only reflect the power it receives. The solution is long-term integration of this limited power, lifting the initially imperceptible signal out of the noise. This integration only works while the target is stationary. However, stationary describes the vast majority of objects, especially lost ones. With this insight, we design Slocalization, a sub-microwatt, decimeter-accurate localization system that opens a new tradeoff space in localization systems and realizes an energy, size, and cost point that invites the localization of every thing. To evaluate this concept, we implement an energy-harvesting Slocalization tag and find that Slocalization can recover ultra wideband backscatter in under fifteen minutes across thirty meters of space and localize tags with a mean 3D Euclidean error of only 30 cm.Comment: Published at the 17th ACM/IEEE Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks (IPSN'18

    Wi-PoS : a low-cost, open source ultra-wideband (UWB) hardware platform with long range sub-GHz backbone

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    Ultra-wideband (UWB) localization is one of the most promising approaches for indoor localization due to its accurate positioning capabilities, immunity against multipath fading, and excellent resilience against narrowband interference. However, UWB researchers are currently limited by the small amount of feasible open source hardware that is publicly available. We developed a new open source hardware platform, Wi-PoS, for precise UWB localization based on Decawave’s DW1000 UWB transceiver with several unique features: support of both long-range sub-GHz and 2.4 GHz back-end communication between nodes, flexible interfacing with external UWB antennas, and an easy implementation of the MAC layer with the Time-Annotated Instruction Set Computer (TAISC) framework. Both hardware and software are open source and all parameters of the UWB ranging can be adjusted, calibrated, and analyzed. This paper explains the main specifications of the hardware platform, illustrates design decisions, and evaluates the performance of the board in terms of range, accuracy, and energy consumption. The accuracy of the ranging system was below 10 cm in an indoor lab environment at distances up to 5 m, and accuracy smaller than 5 cm was obtained at 50 and 75 m in an outdoor environment. A theoretical model was derived for predicting the path loss and the influence of the most important ground reflection. At the same time, the average energy consumption of the hardware was very low with only 81 mA for a tag node and 63 mA for the active anchor nodes, permitting the system to run for several days on a mobile battery pack and allowing easy and fast deployment on sites without an accessible power supply or backbone network. The UWB hardware platform demonstrated flexibility, easy installation, and low power consumption

    Recent Advances in Indoor Localization: A Survey on Theoretical Approaches and Applications

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    Nowadays, the availability of the location information becomes a key factor in today’s communications systems for allowing location based services. In outdoor scenarios, the Mobile Terminal (MT) position is obtained with high accuracy thanks to the Global Positioning System (GPS) or to the standalone cellular systems. However, the main problem of GPS or cellular systems resides in the indoor environment and in scenarios with deep shadowing effect where the satellite or cellular signals are broken. In this paper, we will present a review over different technologies and concepts used to improve indoor localization. Additionally, we will discuss different applications based on different localization approaches. Finally, comprehensive challenges in terms of accuracy, cost, complexity, security, scalability, etc. are presente

    Robust, Energy-Efficient, and Scalable Indoor Localization with Ultra-Wideband Technology

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    Ultra-wideband (UWB) technology has been rediscovered in recent years for its potential to provide centimeter-level accuracy in GNSS-denied environments. The large-scale adoption of UWB chipsets in smartphones brings demanding needs on the energy-efficiency, robustness, scalability, and crossdevice compatibility of UWB localization systems. This thesis investigates, characterizes, and proposes several solutions for these pressing concerns. First, we investigate the impact of different UWB device architectures on the energy efficiency, accuracy, and cross-platform compatibility of UWB localization systems. The thesis provides the first comprehensive comparison between the two types of physical interfaces (PHYs) defined in the IEEE 802.15.4 standard: with low and high pulse repetition frequency (LRP and HRP, respectively). In the comparison, we focus not only on the ranging/localization accuracy but also on the energy efficiency of the PHYs. We found that the LRP PHY consumes between 6.4–100 times less energy than the HRP PHY in the evaluated devices. On the other hand, distance measurements acquired with the HRP devices had 1.23–2 times lower standard deviation than those acquired with the LRP devices. Therefore, the HRP PHY might be more suitable for applications with high-accuracy constraints than the LRP PHY. The impact of different UWB PHYs also extends to the application layer. We found that ranging or localization error-mitigation techniques are frequently trained and tested on only one device and would likely not generalize to different platforms. To this end, we identified four challenges in developing platform-independent error-mitigation techniques in UWB localization, which can guide future research in this direction. Besides the cross-platform compatibility, localization error-mitigation techniques raise another concern: most of them rely on extensive data sets for training and testing. Such data sets are difficult and expensive to collect and often representative only of the precise environment they were collected in. We propose a method to detect and mitigate non-line-of-sight (NLOS) measurements that does not require any manually-collected data sets. Instead, the proposed method automatically labels incoming distance measurements based on their distance residuals during the localization process. The proposed detection and mitigation method reduces, on average, the mean and standard deviation of localization errors by 2.2 and 5.8 times, respectively. UWB and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) are frequently integrated in localization solutions since they can provide complementary functionalities: BLE is more energy-efficient than UWB but it can provide location estimates with only meter-level accuracy. On the other hand, UWB can localize targets with centimeter-level accuracy albeit with higher energy consumption than BLE. In this thesis, we provide a comprehensive study of the sources of instabilities in received signal strength (RSS) measurements acquired with BLE devices. The study can be used as a starting point for future research into BLE-based ranging techniques, as well as a benchmark for hybrid UWB–BLE localization systems. Finally, we propose a flexible scheduling scheme for time-difference of arrival (TDOA) localization with UWB devices. Unlike in previous approaches, the reference anchor and the order of the responding anchors changes every time slot. The flexible anchor allocation makes the system more robust to NLOS propagation than traditional approaches. In the proposed setup, the user device is a passive listener which localizes itself using messages received from the anchors. Therefore, the system can scale with an unlimited number of devices and can preserve the location privacy of the user. The proposed method is implemented on custom hardware using a commercial UWB chipset. We evaluated the proposed method against the standard TDOA algorithm and range-based localization. In line of sight (LOS), the proposed TDOA method has a localization accuracy similar to the standard TDOA algorithm, down to a 95% localization error of 15.9 cm. In NLOS, the proposed TDOA method outperforms the classic TDOA method in all scenarios, with a reduction of up to 16.4 cm in the localization error.Cotutelle -yhteisväitöskirj

    Bidirectional UWB Localization: A Review on an Elastic Positioning Scheme for GNSS-deprived Zones

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    A bidirectional Ultra-Wideband (UWB) localization scheme is one of the three widely deployed design integration processes ordinarily destined for time-based UWB positioning systems. The key property of the bidirectional UWB localization is its ability to serve both the navigation and tracking assignments on-demand within a single localization scheme. Conventionally, the perspective of navigation and tracking in wireless localization systems is viewed distinctly as an individual system because different methodologies were required for the implementation process. The ability to flexibly or elastically combine two unique positioning perspectives (i.e., navigation and tracking) within a single scheme is a paradigm shift in the way location-based services are observed. Thus, this article addresses and pinpoints the potential of a bidirectional UWB localization scheme. Regarding this, the complete system model of the bidirectional UWB localization scheme was comprehensively described based on modular processes in this article. The demonstrative evaluation results based on two system integration processes as well as a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) analysis of the scheme were also discussed. Moreover, we argued that the presented bidirectional scheme can also be used as a prospective topology for the realization of precise location estimation processes in 5G/6G wireless mobile networks, as well as Wi-Fi fine-time measurement-based positioning systems in this article.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figure

    Constrained Localization: A Survey

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    International audienceIndoor localization techniques have been extensively studied in the last decade. The wellestablished technologies enable the development of Real-Time Location Systems (RTLS). A good body of publications emerged, with several survey papers that provide a deep analysis of the research advances. Existing survey papers focus on either a specific technique and technology or on a general overview of indoor localization research. However, there is a need for a use case-driven survey on both recent academic research and commercial trends, as well as a hands-on evaluation of commercial solutions. This work aims at helping researchers select the appropriate technology and technique suitable for developing low-cost, low-power localization system, capable of providing centimeter level accuracy. The article is both a survey on recent academic research and a hands-on evaluation of commercial solutions. We introduce a specific use case as a guiding application throughout this article: localizing low-cost low-power miniature wireless swarm robots. We define a taxonomy and classify academic research according to five criteria: Line of Sight (LoS) requirement, accuracy, update rate, battery life, cost. We discuss localization fundamentals, the different technologies and techniques, as well as recent commercial developments and trends. Besides the traditional taxonomy and survey, this article also presents a hands-on evaluation of popular commercial localization solutions based on Bluetooth Angle of Arrival (AoA) and Ultra-Wideband (UWB). We conclude this article by discussing the five most important open research challenges: lightweight filtering algorithms, zero infrastructure dependency, low-power operation, security, and standardization
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