LED lights point shoppers in the right direction
January 26, 2012Looking 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.
- Wireless optical transmission key to secure, safe and rapid indoor communications Jan 27, 2010 | not rated yet | 0
- Ceiling lights in Minn. send coded Internet data Dec 27, 2010 | not rated yet | 0
- Siemens Sets New Record for Wireless Data Transfer using White LEDs Jan 21, 2010 | not rated yet | 0
- From the desk lamp to the desktop? Mar 09, 2010 | not rated yet | 0
- RF remote control is a superior alternative to infrared control Mar 04, 2009 | not rated yet | 0
- Engineers build first sub-10-nm carbon nanotube transistor Feb 01, 2012 | 5 / 5 (17) | 19
- Something old, something new: Evolution and the structural divergence of duplicate genes Jan 31, 2012 | 4.8 / 5 (6) | 1
- The hidden nanoworld of ice crystals: Revealing the dynamic behavior of quasi-liquid layers Jan 30, 2012 | 5 / 5 (2) | 1
- Stock market network reveals investor clustering Jan 27, 2012 | 4.1 / 5 (21) | 8
- Of microchemistry and molecules: Electronic microfluidic device synthesizes biocompatible probes Jan 26, 2012 | not rated yet | 0
- Counter-weights
2 hours ago - Composite electric glass heating
elements
17 hours ago - pipe stress analysis
18 hours ago - Interested in average household energy
consumption in 2011...
Feb 01, 2012 - Determine temperature profile in cylinder
wall
Feb 01, 2012 - How to know a strain gauge's
accuracy?
Feb 01, 2012 - More from Physics Forums - General Engineering
More news stories
UT biosolar breakthrough promises cheap, easy green electricity
Barry D. Bruce, professor of biochemistry, cellular and molecular biology, at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is turning the term "power plant" on its head. The biochemist and a team of researchers have developed ...
Technology / Energy & Green Tech
7 hours ago | 5 / 5 (3) | 5 |
What Google knows about you
Google knows about you. It knows what you've looked for on its search engine. It knows who you're e-mailing most regularly via Gmail. It knows from Google Calendar what you have going on today. And now, all ...
7 hours ago | 5 / 5 (1) | 2
Chunk of Facebook profit tied to game company Zynga
Facebook Inc., whose initial public offering is slated to be one of the biggest debuts in U.S. stock market history, has disclosed its heavy reliance on a single customer - Zynga Inc.
2 hours ago | not rated yet | 0
Facebook stocks up for Google fight
As Facebook and Google jockey for dominance of the Web, the social networking titan's $5 billion stock offering will give it a hefty warchest for the ongoing fight, analysts said.
4 hours ago | not rated yet | 1
Feds in NY shut down 16 sports streaming websites
(AP) -- With the Super Bowl days away, federal authorities announced a crackdown Thursday on websites that stream unauthorized broadcasts of sports events just hours after New England quarterback Tom Brady ...
2 hours ago | not rated yet | 0
Brains of addicts are inherently abnormal: study
Drug addicts have inherited abnormalities in some parts of the brain which interfere with impulse control, said a British study published on Thursday.
Hubble zooms in on a magnified galaxy
(PhysOrg.com) -- Thanks to the presence of a natural "zoom lens" in space, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope got a uniquely close-up look at the brightest "magnified" galaxy yet discovered.
A battle of the vampires, 20 million years ago?
(PhysOrg.com) -- They are tiny, ugly, disease-carrying little blood-suckers that most people have never seen or heard of, but a new discovery in a one-of-a-kind fossil shows that “bat flies” have ...
Scripps Research alumnus wins International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge
A powerful 3D animation tool created by Graham Johnson at The Scripps Research Institute has been selected as the winning video in the ninth annual International Science & Engineering Visualization Challenge.
NASA satellites see wind shear battering Tropical Depression Iggy
NASA satellites have watched as wind shear has torn Cyclone Iggy apart over the last day. NASA infrared satellite imagery showed that Iggy's strongest thunderstorms have been pushed away from the storm's center ...
New RNA-based therapeutic strategies for controlling gene expression
Small RNA-based nucleic acid drugs represent a promising new class of therapeutic agents for silencing abnormal or overactive disease-causing genes, and researchers have discovered new mechanisms by which ...