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Bluetooth Technology

Bluetooth Technology. Presented by V. Venkata Krishna. History. The name ‘Bluetooth’ was named after 10th century Viking king in Denmark Harald Bluetooth who united and controlled Denmark and Norway.

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Bluetooth Technology

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  1. Bluetooth Technology Presented by V. Venkata Krishna

  2. History • The name ‘Bluetooth’ was named after 10th century Viking king in Denmark Harald Bluetooth who united and controlled Denmark and Norway. • The name was adopted because Bluetooth wireless technology is expected to vunify the telecommunications and computing industries

  3. Who Started Bluetooth? • Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG) • Founded in Spring 1998 • By Ericsson, Intel, IBM, Nokia, Toshiba; • Now more than 2000 organizations joint the SIG

  4. What Is Bluetooth? ☼ Bluetooth is an open standard for short-range digital radio to interconnect a variety of devices Cell phones, PDA, notebook computers, modems, cordless phones, pagers, laptop computers, printers, cameras by developing a single-chip, low-cost, radio-based wireless network technology

  5. Bluetooth • Simplifying communications between: - devices and the internet - data synchronization • Operates in licensed exempt ISM band at 2.4ghz • Uses frequency hoping spread spectrum • Omni directional, no requiring line of sight • Bluetooth offers data speeds of up to 1 Mbps up to 10 meters (Short range wireless radio technology ) • Unlike IrDA, Bluetooth supports a LAN-like mode where multiple devices can interact with each other. • The key limitations of Bluetooth are security and interference with wireless LANs. • Short range wireless radio technology

  6. Content • One is master, which controls and setup the network • All devices operate on the same channel and follow the same frequency hopping sequence • Two or more piconet interconnected to form a scatter net • Only one master for each piconet • A device can’t be masters for two piconets • The slave of one piconet can be the master of another piconet

  7. A Typical Bluetooth Network Piconet • Master sends its globally unique 48-bit id and clock • Hopping pattern is determined by the 48-bit device ID • Phase is determined by the master’s clock • Why at most 7 slaves? • (because a three-bit MAC adress is used). • Parked and standby nodes • Parked devices can not actively participate in the piconet but are known to the network and can be reactivated within some milliseconds • 8-bit for parked nodes • No id for standby nodes • Standby nodes do not participate in the piconet

  8. Security Protocol • There are five phases of Simple Pairing: · Phase 1: Public key exchange · Phase 2: Authentication Stage 1 · Phase 3: Authentication Stage 2 · Phase 4: Link key calculation · Phase 5: LMP Authentication and Encryption • Phases 1, 3, 4 and 5 are the same for all protocols whereas phase 2 (Authentication Stage 1) is different depending on • the protocol used. Distributed through these five phases are 13 steps.

  9. Bluetooth Frequency • Has been set aside by the ISM( industrial ,sientific and medical ) for exclusive use of Bluetooth wireless products • Communicates on the 2.45 GHz frequency

  10. Frequency Selection • FH is used for interference mitigation and media access; • TDD (Test-Driven Development) is used for separation of the transmission directions In 3-slot or 5-slot packets

  11. Avoiding Interference : Hopping • In this technique, a device will use 79 individual, randomly chosen frequencies within a designated range • Transmitters change frequency 1600 times a second • Each channel is divided into time slots 625 microseconds long • Packets can be up to five time slots wide • Data in a packet can be up to 2,745 bits in length

  12. Content • The master for a piconet can join another piconet as a slave; in this case, all communication within in the former piconet will be suspended . • When leaving a piconet, a slave notifies the master about its absence for certain amount of time. • Communication between different piconets takes place by devices jumping back and forth between these nets

  13. Bluetooth Profile Structure

  14. How Does It Work? • Bluetooth is a standard for tiny, radio frequency chips that can be plugged into your devices • These chips were designed to take all of the information that your wires normally send, and transmit it at a special frequency to something called a receiver Bluetooth chip. • The information is then transmitted to your device

  15. BluetoothChip RF Baseband Controller Link Manager Bluetooth Chip

  16. SPECIFICATIONS • Application Specifications • These specifications include the following • Profiles Cordless Telephony • Serial Port • Headset • Intercom • Dialup Networking • Fax • File Transfer • Service Discovery Application • Generic Access

  17. Bluetooth Devices Bluetooth will soon be enabled in everything from: • Telephones • Headsets • Computers • Cameras • PDAs • Cars • Etc …

  18. Advantages (+) • Wireless (No Cables) • No Setup Needed • Low Power Consumption (1 Milliwat) • Industry Wide Support

  19. Disadvantages (-) • Short range (10 meters) • Small throughput rates • - Data Rate 1.0 Mbps • Mostly for personal use (PANs) • Fairly Expensive

  20. Thank you…

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