Based on the IEEE 802.15.1 standard for wireless personal area networks (WPANs), Bluetooth technology is designed to provide reliable, low-power wireless communications over short distances.
Bluetooth is best known as the primary technology for wirelessly connecting mobile phones with peripheral devices such as wireless headsets. However, Bluetooth radios can be an ideal choice for a wide range of designs. Bluetooth may be a good fit if your product:
What’s new?
Bluetooth 4.0 is the latest version of this technology, being adopted in June 2010. It incorporates Classic Bluetooth as well as Bluetooth high speed – a feature introduced in v3.0 which uses a separate 802.11 link to achieve nominal data transfer rates up to 24 Mbits/s.
Yet, perhaps most importantly, Bluetooth 4.0 features a new protocol called Bluetooth low energy (BLE). Also known as “Bluetooth Smart Ready”, BLE offers many significant changes and improvements over other Bluetooth protocols, including low cost, reduced size, and ultra-low power consumption. Compared to Classic Bluetooth, BLE devices are designed to operate using a much lower duty cycle, resulting in significantly lower current consumption – typically in the microamp range. Although BLE is not compatible with Classic Bluetooth, many Bluetooth 4.0 “dual-mode” devices exist which integrate the architecture and protocol stacks of both.
How does it work?
The original version of Bluetooth used Gaussian frequency shift keying (GFSK). Bluetooth 2.0 introduced the Enhanced Data Rate (EDR) feature. EDR-capable devices are capable of data rates up to three times faster using phase shift keying (PSK) modulation techniques instead of GFSK.
Although they operate in the widely used and often “crowded” 2.4GHz ISM frequency band, devices using later versions of Bluetooth (1.2 and higher) offer robust links even in very noisy environments by employing a frequency-hopping technique called adaptive frequency-hopping spread spectrum (AFH). Bluetooth devices avoid interference by rapidly changing between 79 evenly spaced frequency channels – from 2402MHz to 2480MHz. This hopping occurs 1600 times every second, and any data lost due to interference is resent later over a different channel.