Automated estimation of link quality for Lora

A remote sensing approach

Conference Paper (2019)
Author(s)

Silvia Demetri (Università di Trento)

Marco Zuñiga Zamalloa (TU Delft - Embedded Systems)

Gian Pietro Picco (Università di Trento)

Fernando Kuipers (TU Delft - Embedded Systems)

Lorenzo Bruzzone (Università di Trento)

Thomas Telkamp (Lacuna Space)

Research Group
Embedded Systems
Copyright
© 2019 Silvia Demetri, Marco Zuniga, Gian Pietro Picco, F.A. Kuipers, Lorenzo Bruzzone, Thomas Telkamp
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/3302506.3310396
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 Silvia Demetri, Marco Zuniga, Gian Pietro Picco, F.A. Kuipers, Lorenzo Bruzzone, Thomas Telkamp
Research Group
Embedded Systems
Pages (from-to)
145-156
ISBN (print)
978-1-4503-6284-9
ISBN (electronic)
9781450362849
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

Many research and industrial communities are betting on LoRa to provide reliable, long-range communication for the Internet of Things. This new radio technology, however, provides widely heterogeneous coverage; a LoRa link may span hundreds of meters or tens of kilometers, depending on the surrounding environment. This high variability is not captured by popular channel models for LoRa, and on-site measurementsÐa common alternativeÐare impractical due to the large geographical areas involved. We propose a novel, automated approach to estimate the coverage of LoRa gateways prior to deployment and without on-site measurements. We achieve this goal by combining free, readily-available multispectral images from remote sensing with the right channel model. Our processing toolchain automatically classifies the type of environment (e.g., buildings, trees, or open fields) traversed by a link, with high accuracy (>90%) and spatial resolution (10×10m2). We use this information to explain the attenuation observed in experiments. As signal attenuation is not well captured by popular channel models, we focus on the Okumura-Hata empirical model, hitherto largely unexplored for LoRa, and show that i) it yields estimates very close to our observations, and ii) we can use our toolchain to automatically select and configure its parameters. A validation on 8,000+ samples from a real dataset shows that our automated approach predicts the expected signal power within a ∼10dBm error, against the 20ś40dBm of popular channel models.

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