SMART SENSOR SYSTEM AND APPARATUS FOR MEASURING RADIOFREQUENCY AND ELECTROMAGNETIC ENERGY IN REAL TIME
20210211208 ยท 2021-07-08
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R29/0857
PHYSICS
G01R29/0892
PHYSICS
H04B17/101
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to an array of smart sensors (system) that measure, in real-time, the combined radiofrequency electromagnetic energy at any given location, identifies the relative contribution of each energy source, and transmits the measured data wirelessly to a central database for performing data analytics. The collected data will be used to determine the degree of regulatory compliance of wireless network operators to various policies on human exposure limits.
Moreover, the invention will enable spectrum management applications, such as determining various cases of interference, identifying spectrum deployment compliance, and assessing the level of out-of-band emissions.
Finally, the data collected can be used to determine areas with excess electromagnetic energy and feed this information to the wireless network to reduce the transmit power of base stations in real-time as part of a Self-Optimized-Network (SON) system. This approach will significantly reduce the power consumption of the base station, enable more efficient energy use, and reduces the carbon footprint.
Claims
(1) Use of Layer 3 messages for identification of electromagnetic sources: The system uses the information in Layer 3 messages to identify the source of electromagnetic radiation and their relative contribution to overall electromagnetic energy at any given point comprising. (a) A Smart Sensors Network of measuring electromagnetic energy in real-time: The Smart Sensor Network system uses the Internet of Things technology to allow real-time continuous measurement of electromagnetic energy radiation. The information is collected and shared in real-time with a server to allow for trend analysis and system monitoring, for example, to help regulators to maintain radiofrequency radiation at safe levels for the public. The SSN provides real-time measurement of RF radiation, providing a view of how RF energy is changing over time. Such a dynamic view allows for continuous monitoring of the exposure levels even when the RF ecosystems change through network upgrades or new infrastructure build-out. This feature allows regulators and operators to avoid repeat measurement campaigns or iterative simulations using the software every time a new change in the network is perceived. Moreover, the SSN allows for accurate identification of the source of each frequency by determining accurately, which frequency channel, and which operator contributes most of the overall power density. This feature facilitates taking corrective measures as the party who has the highest contribution to the total power density level will have to reduce the transmit power or make necessary changes to the network configuration to avoid overexposure.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0054] The subject matter described relates to an embodiment of a smart sensor system and apparatus for measuring radiofrequency and electromagnetic energy in real-time.
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[0057] (a) Antenna & Wideband Scanner Unit
[0058] The wideband scanner unit scans and captures the RF electromagnetic waves. It converts electromagnetic waves into electrical signals and passes them to the wideband receiver/scanner to down-convert RF signals into baseband signals. A dual-port or dual antenna system may be used to capture electromagnetic waves in the range of 10 MHz-6 GHz and 28 GHz-40 GHz.
[0059] The unit down-converts radio signals into baseband signals. The radio signals contained in the different frequency bands from different carriers are detected and passed onto the baseband module for baseband processing. It simultaneously collects data from these different frequencies across all wireless networks.
[0060] (b) Baseband Unit
[0061] The baseband unit decodes messages broadcasted by cellular wireless networks to mobile devices.
[0062] A wireless network broadcasts network information to all mobile devices within the proximity of a cell site. Because these messages are shared with any mobile device before the authentication by the network, the SRFS will read these messages without being actively connected to the network.
[0063] The information shared is called System Information or Layer 3 Messages and is used by the mobile device to identify among other inputs; the operator of the network, the frequency used by the cell site, the bandwidth of the frequency channel, and Cell ID. For example, in LTE there are two types of system messages; Static and Dynamic information messages. The former is also called Master Information Block (MIB) and is transmitted once every 40 ms, whereas the latter is called System Information Block (SIB) and sent in periodic intervals varying from 80 ms to 320 ms. This information helps the sensor to identify the source of the electromagnetic signal received at any given location. Because the network transmits these messages at regular intervals, any changes to the electromagnetic environment are captured and decoded in real-time.
[0064] The baseband unit extracts the different system information blocks from the received signals. The data retrieved by the baseband unit contains the necessary information to identify the specific operator, single base station, the precise cell, and unique frequency as the source of electromagnetic energy.
[0065] Moreover, the baseband unit tests the majority of wireless technologies (e.g. determining intermodulation products of two signals residing in neighbouring frequency channels, identifying if a frequency from operator one is encroaching into the frequency channel of a different operator and thus corrupting the signal from operator two). An additional function of the baseband unit is to process a pre-recorded voice message to be used in testing voice emergency services.
[0066] (c) Communication Unit The communication unit transmits the data collected by the baseband unit and the wideband scanner to the central database through the wireless network. The implementation of the communication unit could use any wireless technology (e.g. including but not limited to NB-IoT, CAT-ML EDGE, GPRS, GSM, UMTS, CDMA, LTE, WiFi, Bluetooth, Sigfox, etc.).
[0067] (d) Data Encryption Unit The data encryption unit protects the data as it moves through the internet by encrypting it. The encryption is done at the sensor level as an extra layer of security before the transmission through the communication unit to the analytics database. Because of the size of the sensors, there is a trade-off between security and what resources are available to implement the encryption (i.e. due to the limited memory size, power consumption, limited bandwidth and execution time for example). In an embodiment, the encryption unit does not have to be a separate unit in the device and could be a function already incorporated in the communication unit, using wireless encryption techniques.
[0068] (e) Power Unit The power unit supplies and manages the power requirements for all components inside the sensor system, regardless of where the sensors are located. In an embodiment, the power unit is a battery or cells. All the components inside the sensor are designed for low power consumption and operation to maximize the lifespan of the battery. In a more advanced and sophisticated implementation, electricity may be generated via a magnetic inductive coupling or electromagnetic radiation as these sensors are in the vicinity of these electromagnetic waves.
[0069] (g) GPS Unit The GPS unit identifies and tracks the location of the system and all of its components. It provides a location stamp for each transmitted data unit. It uses the GPS satellite system to identify the location of each device.
[0070] (h) RFID Unit The RFID unit identifies the SRFS using a mobile device or an RFID reader in order to help determine a sensor for maintenance, inventory, or warehousing purposes.
[0071] (i) Microprocessor Unit The microprocessor unit orchestrates the operation and functionality of all system components and allows them to communicate and exchange necessary data or instructions to function correctly. In an embodiment, this unit consumes a relatively small amount of energy in order to help extend battery life.
[0072] Overview of the Smart Sensor Network (SSN)
[0073] (A) Smart RF Sensor Functionality
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[0076] Other factors will be used to correlate the two sets of data, discussed in more detail below.
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[0079] (B) System Data Analysis
[0080] The system analyzes the data after it collects it. The system provides a very accurate assessment of the source of electromagnetic energy for each transmitted frequency by correlating the data collected from the wideband scanner and the baseband unit. The Layer 3 messages obtained by the baseband unit contains key network information including the EARFCN number which represents the center frequency used by the serving cell site. This frequency is the common denominator that links the data from the baseband unit to the data collected by the wideband scanner. The system relates every frequency measured from the wideband scanner with its corresponding value in the data decoded by the baseband unit. At the completion of this step, the device associates the power density data with the corresponding identification data.
[0081] The outcome is a list of frequencies, with a measured electromagnetic power level, the specific source including the operator (PLMN ID), the transmitting cell (Cell ID), the source base station (eNodeB ID), the type of modulation used, etc.
[0082] Not every frequency measured by the wideband scanner has a corresponding EARFCN value in Layer 3 messages decoded by the baseband unit. As an example, wireless networks using an unlicensed spectrum (WiFi for example) do not rely on broadcasting channels as in the case of cellular networks. For these specific frequencies, the device relies on traditional methods to identify the source of radiation including regulatory spectrum database or other data sources.
[0083] In an embodiment, the system tests emergency voice services using a pre-recorded message in the baseband unit that is transmitted using the communication unit to a central server. The system verifies automatically, without any manual intervention, if the voice message has been successfully received and decoded through the network.