To communicate with the gateway(s) connected to the Internet and serve as transparent bridges and relay messages between these end devices and a central network server, end devices use LoRa across a single wireless hop. LoRa is a long-range, low-power, low-bitrate wireless telecommunications system. The price of constructing and maintaining the connectivity infrastructure is one of the difficulties in adopting IoT applications. This study investigates the viability of creating a low-cost Internet of Things (IoT) network based on LoRa, a prominent Low-Power Wide-Area Network (LPWAN) technology, utilizing commercially available parts and open-source software.
What is LoRa?
To meet the communication needs of the Internet of Things, a variety of protocols and technologies have emerged, Informally speaking, an LPWAN is meant to be to the Internet of Things what WiFi was to consumer networking: providing radio coverage over a sizable area via base stations and adapting transmission rates, transmission power, modulation, duty cycles, etc. so that end-devices experience low energy consumption as a result of being connected. LoRa targets deployments where end devices have limited energy, where end devices only need to transmit a few bytes at a time, and where end devices can initiate data traffic on their own or be initiated by an external entity that wants to communicate with the end device. LoRa is an intriguing contender for intelligent sensing technology in civic infrastructures (such as health monitoring, smart metering, environment monitoring, etc.), as well as in industrial applications, because of its long-range and low-power characteristics.
Is LoRa Gateway Cost-Friendly?
LoRa gateways employ proprietary protocols, which are distinct and change across brands. When choosing appropriate hardware for wide-scale deployment of end nodes, gateways, and beyond, customers may need more time to be free from the product brands. Additionally, it makes it more difficult for the new product to communicate with the current system and may prevent it from giving people what they want. LoRaWAN may be utilized with public or private networks in various situations. LoRaWAN best meets the requirements for long-range and low-power systems. Here is a list of typical applications for LoRa:
- Smart agriculture: Any IoT system architecture has a large area to cover in farms, including indoors. For such an application, a smaller communication range necessitates additional gateways, raising the system design cost. Because outdoor gateways with a greater degree and less power consumption may perfectly fill the demand, LoRaWAN® may be the best option. Simpler network design, lower operating costs, and less complicated maintenance are three major advantages of farm solutions.
- Management of parking systems: The days of conventional parking systems are long gone. Those manual ticketing systems devices would have lower features and poorer time and economic productivity, especially in congested and crowded places. One can book parking spaces; management may monitor parking individually and even identify any accidents thanks to smart parking sensors.
- Intelligent structures: Automation, analytics, monitoring, and connection are the four pillars of the Industry. These elements would be part of the next-generation infrastructure, including intelligent sensors and actuators. These smart gadgets can have sustainable power usage and IoT connection thanks to LoRaWAN®. Numerous sensors, including those for temperature, humidity, light, gas, and other similar sensor types, can be a part of an IoT ecosystem. Access control, staff management, security, fire detection, and even something as basic as remote device control are all possible with LoRaWAN® solutions.
- Applications for smart cities: Networks with long-range requirements might be among the applications for smart cities. Streetlight control, water quality monitoring systems, energy monitoring networks, structural health monitoring, traffic congestion tracking, and noise mapping solutions are some potential applications for LoRaWAN® in smart cities. The communication ranges needed for these software solutions would be greater than those of Bluetooth or WiFi networks. LoRa would also be a cost-effective and practical option in this situation.
- Smart tracking: Triangulation-based GPS position tracking, fault management systems, machine monitoring solutions, warehouse management, and asset tracking are other uses for LoRa networks.
Conclusion
Each year, more companies start using LoRa to its full potential. Its distinct combination of features makes it the ideal protocol for usage in various IoT deployments, including smart city systems, IoT-enabled transportation, asset monitoring, and smart buildings. With its cost- and energy-efficiency and long-range signal reach, LoRa more than makes up for its bandwidth limitations. Lora’s great potential has recently been demonstrated by using technology to implement smart city initiatives. For a technology of this kind, its open-source license offers a level of freedom of use that has never before been possible. This will undoubtedly enable it to play a crucial role in developing the IoT technological stack.