Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chapter 7 – Aloha-Based Protocol

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chapter 7 – Aloha-Based Protocol"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 7 – Aloha-Based Protocol

2 Table 7.1 RFID standards and products

3 Figure 7.1 Reader and tags interactions

4 Figure 7.2 Pure Aloha with muting

5 Figure 7.3 Pure Aloha with slow down

6 Figure 7.4 Pure Aloha with fast mode

7 Figure 7.5 Slotted Aloha with early end

8 Figure 7.6 λ = 20, K = 5 λ is the offered load and K is the maximum retransmission delay Klair et al. 2009

9 Figure 7.7 Number of collision to read n tags

10 Figure 7.8 Number of idle slots encountered when reading n tags

11 Table 7.2 Optimal frame sizes for a given tag range

12 Figure 7.9 (a) A CD frame precedes each jump frame.
The number of slots in each jump frame corresponds to the number of successful transmissions in the CD frame; in this example, only two tags successfully transmitted their ID. Tags that transmitted successfully in the CD frame then send their full ID in the jump frame.

13 Figure 7.9 (b) Collision detection using Manchester encoding
no transition in the middle of a bit indicates a collision

14 Table 7.3 EDFSA frame sizes
n denotes the number of tags, N is the frame size, and M is the number of tag groups.

15 Figure 7.10 ResMon Frames

16 Figure 7.11 An example showing QT being used to identify the following tags: A (0111), B (0000), C (0101) and D (0001). In scenario (ii), only tags A and B contend with each other. Tag C and D will contend at a different time.

17 Figure 7.12 Reading delay of BFSA, DFSA, and EDFSA variants

18 Figure 7.13 Average number of collisions encountered when reading n tags

19 Figure 7.14 Average number of idle slots encountered when reading n tags


Download ppt "Chapter 7 – Aloha-Based Protocol"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google