SAN FRANCISCO -- Looking for an item in a large department store or
mall can be like searching for a needle in a haystack, but that could
change thanks to a hybrid location-identification system that uses radio
frequency transmitters and overhead LED lights, suggested by a team of
researchers from Penn State and Hallym University in South Korea.
"LED lights are becoming the norm," said Mohsen Kavehrad, W. L. Weiss
Chair Professor of Electrical Engineering and director of the Center
for Information and Communications Technology Research at Penn State.
"The same lights that brighten a room can also provide locational
information."
To locate an item in a mall, the system would not need to transfer
large amounts of data. Kavehrad and his team envision large stores or
malls with overhead LED light fixtures, each assigned with a location
code. At the entrance, a computer that is accessible via keyboard or
even telephone would contain a database of all the items available.
Shortly after a query, the location or locations of the desired item
would appear.
"The human eye can't see beyond 15 on and offs of a light per
second," said Kavehrad. "We can get kilobytes and megabytes of
information in very rapid blinking of the LEDs," he told attendees at
the SPIE Photonics West 2012 conference today in San Francisco.
But LED-transmitted locational information alone will not work
because light does not transmit through walls. Kavehrad, working with
Zhou Zhou, graduate student in electrical engineering, Penn State,
designed a hybrid LiFi system using a Zigbee multihop wireless network
with the LEDs.
ZigBee is an engineering specification designed for small, low-power
digital radio frequency applications requiring short-range wireless
transfer of data at relatively low rates. ZigBee applications usually
require a low data rate, long battery life, and secure networking.
While a ceiling light can have communications with anything placed
beneath its area, light cannot travel through walls, so a hybrid system
using light and RF became the practical solution.
The system consists of the location-tagged LEDs and combination
photodiode and Zigbee receiver merchandise tags. The request for an item
goes from the computer through the many jumps of short radio frequency
receivers and transmitters placed throughout the mall. The RF/photodiode
tag on the merchandise sought, reads its location from the overhead LED
and sends the information back through the wireless network to the
computer.
Even when merchandise is moved from room to room, the accurate
location remains available because a different LED overhead light with a
different location code signals the tag.
While ideal for shopping applications, this hybrid model is also
useful in other situations. LED-transmitted information is useful in
places like hospitals, where radio frequency signals can interfere with
equipment.
Modern Geographic Positioning Systems, such as those in cell phones,
can easily locate people outside, but they do not work within buildings.
A hybrid system in a high-rise office building, for example, could not
only tell the system someone was in the building, but could identify the
floor where the person was at that time. In museums or hospitals,
navigation systems could guide people through large buildings by reading
the final destination signal from a hand-carried photodiode device and
initializing lights or other indicators to show the proper path.
Kavehrad notes that Zigbee devices are designed to be inexpensive, as
are the photodiodes also required for the system. Not every identical
item would need a tag and the tags are reusable.
Also working on this project were Yong Up Lee, professor of
electronics, Hallym University, Chuncheon, Korea, currently at Penn
State on sabbatical, and Sungkeun Baang and Joohyeon Park, masters
degree students at Hallym University.
The National Research Foundation of Korea and the National Science Foundation funded this work.
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