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Energy saving with NB-IoT and LTE-M

In this blog, we take a closer look at the energy consumption of NB-IoT and LTE-M. Any energy savings do not come by themselves. The IoT developer has to choose the right AT commands and the right protocol with the right strategy. Sometimes constraints mean that we also have to do without NB-IoT and LTE-M and take a different path. Have fun reading and learning.

Table of contents

  1. NB-IoT / LTEM versus GSM
  2. LWM2M versus MQTT

NB-IoT / LTEM versus GSM

In a nutshell: GSM was developed for voice communication and NB-IoT / LTEM was developed for data transmission.

So what can GSM do?

In 1979, the 900 MHz frequency range was reserved for a mobile radio system for voice communication without a name. This range was later extended to 1800 MHz in Europe and 850 MHz and 1900 MHz in the USA. In 1982, the CEPT (Conférence Européenne des Postes et Télécommunications) set up a working group called the „Groupe Spéciale Mobile“, or GSM for short. The goal was to develop a European mobile radio system. With the later worldwide spread of the technology, the meaning of GSM was changed to „Global System for Mobile Communications“. It was not until 1995 that fax, Circuit Switch Data (CSD), Short Message Service (SMS) and other functions were added in a second phase for data transmission. The packet-switched data service General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) was only added in 2000. GPRS enabled access to the Internet. After that came EGPRS. The original idea of GSM was a digital radio network for voice communication without the known problems from the analogue radio networks. All carriers for transmitting data were added later.

Saving energy with GSM/GPRS

In order for a GSM/GPRS device to communicate, it must be switched on. If an IoT device based on GPRS stays switched on in receive mode, it requires a constant 5 mA current. With this current being continuously drawn, the battery is drained after a few days. The only way to reduce energy consumption is to switch off the device. If the IoT device is switched off, an energy-hungry re-registration to the GSM/GPRS network is necessary. An IoT device based on GPRS only knows the operations: switched on with receiving, switched on with transmitting and switched off.

So what is NB-IoT?

NB-IoT is a radio network within a radio network. It is operated in the same frequency band as LTE. NB-IoT was specified from the start to operate on battery power and cannot transmit voice communication.

The history of NB-IoT from 2014

In 2014, Neul in the UK came up with the idea for a scalable, secure, robust and economical region-wide radio technology for network operators. For this purpose, the radio protocol for the licence-free band called Weightless was changed. The pre-existing protocol was adapted to the licence-required bands of mobile radio. The goal was to provide network services for small devices with low power consumption and connection to the cloud. Compared to GPRS, this new technology had a 20 dB higher link budget and thus better network coverage. The radio technology could operate in any frequency band below 1 GHz. Such a Neul-Weightless network required a frequency spectrum of only 180 kHz as the network within the network. A GSM subcarrier or 200 kHz within the LTE spectrum was enough. Neul offered small, powerful radio modules and the base station.

If you look closely, you can see the NB-IoT specification in the wording. NB-IoT uses only 180 kHz in a free spectrum within the LTE frequency band for 12 channels. The 20 dB greater link budget over GPRS is also found in NB-IoT. Huawei recognised the benefits of Weightless and bought Neul in September 2016. The world’s first NB-IoT chipset was launched by Huawei subsidiary Hisilicon called Boudica 100 in December 2016. In 2022, we have already arrived at the third generation NB-IoT chipset.

Below we explain how NB-IoT saves energy.

Power Save Mode PSM

In PSM mode, the radio module is not completely shut down and the memory with the data for logging into the NB-IoT is not erased. With the memory active, the NB-IoT ddevice requires only 3 uA of continuous current. Completely shut down, it also requires approximately 3 uA.

The NB-IoT module informs the NB-IoT base station that it will be shut down and stores the registration data. The NB-IoT base station acknowledges the request to shut down and also stores the registration data. The NB-IoT then enters PSM mode and is no longer accessible. The NB-IoT device can be woken up by the microcontroller at any time in the case of an event. In contrast to the first registration, the new registration (called reattach) requires significantly less energy than the first registration (attach).

Release Assistant Indication RAI

With RAI, the NB-IoT network is informed that no receipt of data is expected after sending. Water meters, bins for recyclables and many other IoT sensors do not require an acknowledgement after sending status. If the status of the meter or the fill level is lost, it doesn’t matter because a new status is transmitted 12 or 24 hours later anyway. Shutting down the receive window saves up to 50 % of the energy of a data packet. If alarm messages with acknowledgements are required in some circumstances, RAI can be switched on and off dynamically.

To use RAI, NB-IoT with UDP or CoAP/UDP must be used. TCP and MQTT are based on TCP and so cannot work without acknowledgement. All other protocols based on TCP are therefore not suitable for energy-saving with RAI.

Extended Discontinuous Reception eDRX

The eDRX operating mode enables continuous receive operation. The procedure is not new and has been used with pagers for decades. A Pocsag pager wakes up briefly every few seconds and checks whether a message is received. If it recognises from the group address that the message is not for it, it does not read in the complete address and immediately aborts the receive operation. With NB-IoT, there is also periodic continuous receiving (paging) with eDRX. In contrast to Pocsag, the reception window for paging is not statically set to seconds but can be dynamic from 20.48 to 10485.76 seconds (~175 minutes). The NB-IoT device informs the base station of the timer for the eDRX, receives an acknowledgement and is then periodically reachable.

Summary of energy saving measures

NB-IoT, like Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), NeoMesh and Pocsag, requires little energy. The four wireless technologies save energy by switching off in an intelligent way. Switching off and not receiving saves the most energy. NB-IoT, Bluetooth Low Energy, NeoMesh and Pocsag pagers can receive continuously with little energy because the receiving operation is synchronised via precise timers. This is called eDRX in NB-IoT. PSM is just a smart switch off without really switching off. RAI is just a smart send without opening a receive window.

The IoT developer must dynamically switch on or switch over the functions PSM, RAI and eDRX themself to achieve the best balance of minimal energy consumption for a given application’s communication needs. The same applies to searching for the radio network or switching from NB-IoT to LTEM and vice versa. LTEM modules offer the same timers. When to switch and how can be read in my guide to NB-IoT, LTEM and GSM to find the best strategy for your IoT application.

LWM2M versus MQTT

Simply put: MQTT can do practically nothing and LwM2M can do everything.

So what can MQTT do?

Message Queuing Telemetry Transport (MQTT) can, as the name suggests, only transport data with 14 control commands. Unfortunately, MQTT does not transport the data in an energy-optimised way for battery-operated devices. MQTT is a compromise between energy-saving and safety when transporting data. Compared to the relatively energy-hungry HTTP protocol, MQTT requires less energy. HTTP was developed to transfer web pages based on TCP and therefore does not need to save energy. TCP is inherently very hungry because it repeats packets if there is no acknowledgement. Unfortunately, with MQTT, only the complex page description language HTML has been trimmed and the main problem caused by TCP has not been eliminated. MQTT makes it possible to work on the protocol layer with and without acknowledgements. The layer below is TCP and continues to acknowledge. In addition, TCP servers have a time-out that can often not be met via radio protocols. #NBIoT and #LTEM with a latency of up to 20 seconds are difficult to use with high energy consumption. The Power Save Mode (PSM) with up to 310 hours and Extended Discontinuous Reception (eDRX) of up to 40 minutes cannot be operated at all with MQTT. The developers had a good idea in 1999 but unfortunately missed the chance to develop the MQTT protocol on User Datagram Protocol (UDP) instead of TCP.

What can CoAP do?

CoAP was published 10 years later in December 2009 as „CoAP Feature Analysis draft shelby 6lowapp coap 00„. Like MQTT, it can transport data. It was specified as a transmission protocol for use in restricted networks and nodes for M2M applications. These constrained nodes often use 8-bit microcontrollers with little memory. Wireless networks such as 6LoWPAN often have a high packet error rate. The special conditions and packet loss were taken into account in the specification of CoAP by its fathers from the 6LoWPAN world. CoAP used UDP instead of TCP. It has only four control commands (Get, Put, Delete, Post). UDP does not acknowledge in its protocol layer. An acknowledgement is only made one level higher with CoAP. Within CoAP, commands can be sent with or without an acknowledgement. Because the fill level of a tank or a water meter is sent cyclically, an acknowledgement is usually unnecessary. A packet loss is not critical. Since CoAP on UDP or SMS has no time-out, a few minutes delay with SMS or hours and days with NB-IoT PSM and NB-IoT eDRX are no problem. NB-IoT Release Assistance Indication (RAI) immediately switches off the receiver after sending and thus fits perfectly with CoAP without acknowledgement. CoAP is therefore the perfect match NB-IoT and LTE-M. The first version of the specification comprising 14 pages has grown to 110 pages over several adaptations since 2013.

What can LwM2M do?

LwM2M, unlike MQTT and CoAP, is much more than just a transmission protocol for data. In order for LwM2M to perfectly serve the new low-energy radio protocols NB-IoT and LTE-M, CoAP/UDP and SMS were chosen in version 1.0. This ensures that NB-IoT can be used perfectly with PSM, eDRX, and RAI. In the newer versions of LwM2M, LoRaWAN, CoAP/TCP and even MQTT have since been added. Devices with MQTT can thus be easily integrated into LwM2M. One of the key features of LwM2M is device management. Since LwM2M was influenced by mobile network operators at the OMA, their experience in managing wireless phones has been taken into account. Registration with the LwM2M server is possible very securely in various ways. The commissioning of a device with bootstrap is also standardised under LwM2M. Necessary FOTA is also managed by the server. The communication of a device is standardised with profiles and resources. Through the mandatory profiles Security, Server, Device and Location, any LwM2M device from any manufacturer can communicate with any LwM2M server on our beautiful blue planet. After successful registration, the LwM2M server interrogates the device and from that point knows whether it is a water meter, presence detector, level meter or tracking device, for example. A device can also support several profiles in parallel.

Summary LwM2M versus MQTT

LwM2M supports many protocols for transmission and was specified in the first version on CoAP/UDP. Contrary to MQTT, it was planned from the beginning for devices with batteries and low energy consumption. LwM2M handles device management, bootstrapping, firmware update over the air and communication via profiles.MQTT does not offer all this. MQTT has never been optimised for the lowest energy consumption and nothing is regulated and standardised except transport. Any company aiming for extensive digitalisation has a good starting point with LwM2M. Perhaps we will soon see the launch of a rocket to Mars, with firmware update via LwM2M. The transit time of about 3 to 22.3 minutes from Mars to Earth is no hurdle for LwM2M. Even signals from Neptune with a 4-hour delay can be solved with this genius protocol.

„Can you hear me, Major Tom?“ 🚀 🌍 😀

PSM, RAI and eDRX is supported by LwM2M. The IoT developer just needs to insert the right AT commands in the LwM2M stack and choose their appropriate strategy.

We are happy to provide you the best fit SIM – just ask:

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Embedded Antenna Design – Make or Buy – Q&A

Five questions for Harald Naumann following his tutorial „Embedded Antenna Design – Make or Buy“ at the 15th Wireless Congress in Munich.

Mr Naumann, what challenges do antennas pose for developers?

Harald Naumann: Antennas are the key to success. A difference of 3 dB in radiated power can mean 2.5 years of operation instead of five or in the opposite case even ten years of battery life instead of five.

If the enclosure together with the battery absorbs 3 dB, the transmitter must compensate for this by emitting 3 dB more transmitting power. However, 3 dB more transmitting power means twice the transmitting current and this reduces the operating time of a battery-powered radio transmitter to half – just like in the example mentioned from five years to 2.5 years.

If the system gain is 3 dB better, on the other hand, the battery life doubles – from five years to ten years.

Regardless of the total operating time, 3 dB is more or less decisive for the range – and thus one of the most important criteria for the planned application.

What antenna designs are available to developers and how do they differ?

Antenna examples
1) Round LTE PCB antenna with coaxial cable for a disc-shaped enclosure.2) Round double-F antenna for LTE-Cat-NB1.3) Rectangular multi-band antenna for GSM, UMTS and LTE, optimised on a small base plate of 50 mm × 40 mm.

Naumann: With chip antennas, developers have the choice between antennas that work as an electrical monopole antenna or as a magnetic monopole antenna.

Magnetic antennas are insensitive to the presence of a human body near the near field. The centre frequency remains stable.

An electric antenna, on the other hand, shifts its centre frequency more or less when an object is in the near field.

A PCB antenna can be included on the main PCB as a conductor track, for example with a 90° angle or also as a flexible printed circuit board. An example of such a PCB antenna is the dual-band F antenna for GSM and LTE-Cat-NB1, which I published in my IoT / M2M cookbook. Interested parties can insert the antenna into their PCB layout and produce the antenna together with the PCB at no additional cost. However, the tutorial primarily deals with the common antenna types.

As a third type, antennas can also be cut and bent from sheet metal.

What is the difference between ready-made antennas and self-made antennas?

Gillette order button PCB
F-antenna for GSM and LTE-Cat-NB1 (at the edge of the PCB above) as used in the Gillette order button.

Naumann: Self-built PCB antennas as part of the PCB show up in the parts list with zero Euro.

Self-built PCB antennas can also be tuned to 50 Ω without antenna matching circuitry, which also avoids losses in the matching circuit.

Self-built antennas can be almost any shape giving flexibilty to the design of the enclosure.

The Gillette order button with its F antenna is a good example of the advantages of PCB antennas: not present in the bill of materials (0 Euro), adaptable to the enclosure shape (in this case: round) and low-loss in antenna matching.

How can a developer choose the right antenna?

Naumann: The easiest way: they ask a member of their team with knowledge of antennas and antenna design or an external antenna expert. The cost of a few hours of expert advice is a good investment.

After a designer has selected the antenna or several antennas, they should test them on a blank PCB, installed in the final enclosure or in a prototype enclosure – made of plastic with the same εr or at least a similar εr.

This is because, in the case of chip antennas, it should be noted that the specifications in the manufacturers‘ data sheets refer only to an antenna mounted on the reference board and without an enclosure.

What did you show in your tutorial at the Wireless Congress and who were you targeting?

Naumann: Together with Roger Denker, I discussed good and bad antennas. Everyone can even learn from bad or wrong examples.

We also showed several successful embedded antennas, from devices that are mass-produced, for NeoMesh, Mioty, LoRaWAN, Sigfox, LTE-M, NB-IoT and GSM.

We addressed hardware developers with knowledge of PCB design and show them the way to develop a working antenna.

Source of the original text: https://www.elektroniknet.de/kommunikation/wireless/wie-wichtig-sind-antennen-in-der-praxis.157257.html

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