• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Friday, October 10, 2025
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
iotwashington
  • Home
  • Internet of Things
  • Security
  • WAN
  • Cloud Computing
  • Data Centers
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Software
  • Home
  • Internet of Things
  • Security
  • WAN
  • Cloud Computing
  • Data Centers
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Software
No Result
View All Result
iotwashington
No Result
View All Result
Home Internet of Things

Future ‘smart walls’ key to IoT

in Internet of Things
0
SHARES
10
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

IoT equipment designers shooting for efficiency should explore the potential for using buildings as antennas, researchers say.

Environmental surfaces such as walls can be used to intercept and beam signals, which can increase reliability and data throughput for devices, according to MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL).

Researchers at CSAIL have been working on a smart-surface repeating antenna array called RFocus. The antennas, which could be applied in sheets like wallpaper, are designed to be incorporated into office spaces and factories. Radios that broadcast signals could then become smaller and less power intensive.

“Tests showed that RFocus could improve the average signal strength by a factor of almost 10,” CSAIL’s Adam Conner-Simonswrites in MIT News. “The platform is also very cost-effective, with each antenna costing only a few cents.”

The prototype system CSAIL developed uses more than 3,000 antennas embedded into sheets, which are then hung on walls. In future applications, the antennas could adhere directly to the wall or be integrated during building construction.

“People have had things completely backwards this whole time,” the article claims. “Rather than focusing on the transmitters and receivers, what if we could amplify the signal by adding antennas to an external surface in the environment itself?”

RFocus relies on beamforming; multiple antennas broadcast the same signal at slightly different times, and as a result, some of the signals cancel each other and some strengthen each other. When properly executed, beamforming can focus a stronger signal in a particular direction.

“The surface does not emit any power of its own,” the developers explain in their paper (PDF). The antennas, or RF switch elements, as the group describes them, either let a signal pass through or reflect it through software. Signal measurements allow the apparatus to define exactly what gets through and how it’s directed.

Importantly, the RFocus surface functions with no additional power requirements. The “RFocus surface can be manufactured as an inexpensive thin ‘wallpaper’ requiring no wiring,” the group says.

Antenna design

Antenna engineering is turning into a vital part of IoT development. It’s one of the principal reasons data throughput and reliability keeps improving in wireless networks.

Arrays where multiple, active panel components make up antennas, rather than a simple passive wire, as is the case in traditional radio, is an example of advancements in antenna engineering.

Spray-on antennas (unrelated to the CSAIL work) is another in-the-works technology I’ve written about. In that case, flexible substrates create the antenna, which is applied in a manner that’s similar to spray paint. Another future direction could be anti-laser antennas:Reversing a laser, where the laser becomes an absorber of light rather than the sender of it, could allow all data-carrying energy to be absorbed, making it the perfect light-based antenna.

Development of 6G wireless, which is projected to supersede 5G sometime around 2030, includes efforts to figure out how to directly couple antennas to fiber—the radio ends up being part of the cable, in other words.

“We can’t get faster internet speeds without more efficient ways of delivering wireless signals,” CSAIL’s Conner-Simons says.

Join the Network World communities on Facebook and LinkedIn to comment on topics that are top of mind.
Free Download WordPress Themes
Download Nulled WordPress Themes
Download Premium WordPress Themes Free
Download Premium WordPress Themes Free
free online course
download karbonn firmware
Download Premium WordPress Themes Free
download udemy paid course for free
Tags: Future ‘smart walls’ key to IoT
Next Post

Predictive maintenance via IoT offers big upsides, but few easy wins

Recommended

PayPal hypes its mobile strengths ahead of IPO

Microsoft patents … a mere 146 issued so far in November

Facebook Twitter Youtube RSS

Newsletter

Subscribe our Newsletter for latest updates.

Loading

Category

  • AI
  • Careers
  • Cloud Computing
  • Connected Cars
  • Connected Vehicles
  • Data & Analytics
  • Data Center
  • Data Centers
  • Databases
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Hardware
  • Healthcare
  • IIoT
  • Infrastructure
  • Internet of Things
  • IoT
  • IT Leadership
  • Manufacturing
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Oil & Gas
  • Open Source
  • Security
  • Smart Cities
  • Smart Homes
  • Software
  • Software Development
  • Standards
  • Technology Industry
  • Uncategorized
  • Unified Communications
  • Virtualization
  • WAN
  • Wearables

About Us

Advance IOT information site of Washington USA

© 2024 iotwashington.com.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Internet of Things
  • Security
  • WAN
  • IoT
  • Cloud Computing
  • Data Centers
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Software

© 2024 iotwashington.com.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In