Near-field electromagnetic ranging
Near-field electromagnetic ranging refers to any radio technology employing the near-field properties of radio waves as a Real Time Location System.
Overview
Near-field electromagnetic ranging is an emerging RTLS technology that employs transmitter tags and one or more receiving units. Operating within a half-wavelength of a receiver, transmitter tags must use relatively low frequencies to achieve significant ranging. Depending on the choice of frequency, NFER has the potential for range resolution of and ranges up to.Technical Discussion
The phase relations between the EH components of an electro-magnetic field ) vary with distance around small antennas. This was first discovered by Heinrich Hertz and is formulated with Maxwell's field theory.Close to a small antenna, the electric and magnetic field components of a radio wave are 90 degrees out of phase. As the distance from the antenna increases, the EH phase difference decreases. Far from a small antenna in the far-field, the EH phase difference goes to zero. Thus a receiver that can separately measure the electric and magnetic field components of a near-field signal and compare their phases can measure the range to the transmitter.
Advantages
NFER technology is a different approach for locating systems. It has several inherent advantages over other RTLS systems.- First, no signal modulation is required, so baseband signals with an arbitrarily small bandwidth may be used for ranging.
- Second, precise synchronization is not required between different receivers: in fact, a local range measurement can be made with just a single receiver.
- Third, since EH phase differences are preserved when a signal is down-converted to baseband, high range precision may be achieved with relatively low time precision.
Using relatively low frequencies also conveys additional advantages. First, low frequencies are generally more penetrating than higher frequencies. For instance, at 2.4 GHz a reinforced concrete wall might attenuate signals as much as 20 dB. Second, the long wavelengths associated with low frequencies are far less vulnerable to multipath. In dense metallic structures, multipath obscures or destroys the ability of microwave or UHF signals to be used for reliable positioning. Low frequencies are less affected by this problem.