This application claims priority under 35 USC § 119(e) to European Patent Application No. 11 166 284.7 filed on May 16, 2011 and European Patent Application No. 11 181 681.5 filed on Sep. 16, 2011, which applications are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to the field of wireless synchronization, which can be used for instance in Real Time Locating Systems (RTLS) based on Time Difference Of Arrival (TDOA).
In Real Time Locating Systems, which utilize a Time Difference Of Arrival of messages transmitted by location tags and received by location receivers, time base synchronization between location receivers is a key task.
In the context of the present specification, synchronization is to be understood as a determination of a synchronization correction value, which describes the difference between the time assessed in accordance with the different time bases of the location receivers at a given moment. Whether this information is subsequently used to actually adjust the time bases or to correct TDOA values which were generated using these time bases is irrelevant. The latter use of synchronization is sometimes called “virtual synchronization”, for instance in U.S. Pat. No. 6,968,194 B2.
In many products synchronization is achieved by connecting the location receivers, which herein will also referred to as location anchors, with a reference time base over a wired connection. Obviously, however, a wired connection is expensive to install and in some cases may even be impossible to install.
Several methods have been developed in order to perform said synchronization via a wireless channel. Such methods use a reference device, which transmits a reference signal. For example, US 2004/0108954 A and U.S. Pat. No. 7,492,316 B1 describe the use of a “reference tag”, which transmits a sequence of pulses as a reference signal, for distributing reference timing within a network of location receivers.
Another system described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,528,776 B2 makes use of the fact that the reference device is positioned at a known location.
Another prior-art Real Time Locating System that uses a wireless channel for synchronization is shown in
For synchronization purposes, the reference tags 101 periodically broadcast messages, which are received by the location receivers 100. Based on the respective Times Of Arrival (TOAs), time differences of arrival (TDOAs) between the respective times of reception of these messages by different location receivers 100 are calculated. Given the known positions of the reference tags, the synchronization between the location receivers 100 is calculated.
In order to determine the location of the location tags 102, the location tags 102 broadcast messages, which are received by at least some of the location receivers 100. The respective TOAs of these messages are recorded at the location receivers 100 and reported to the location server 104. The location server 104 calculates the TDOAs between location receivers. Based on the TDOAs and the known positions of the location receivers 100 the location server 104 determines the location of the location tags 102.
In practice, a message which is transmitted by the reference tag 101 and received by location receivers 100 is subject to multipath propagation. This multipath propagation causes an error in the synchronization of the location receivers 100. Thus, the synchronization between location receivers 100 and the subsequent calculations of TDOAs and locations of location tags may be highly inaccurate in a multipath environment.
US 2008/0095131 A1 addresses the problem of multipath propagation of reference messages by performing a distance measurement between a reference tag, (which is called “sync unit”), and the location receivers. Basically, two-way ranging measurements between location receivers and reference tags are suggested. Two way ranging has been described for example in annex D1.3.1 of IEEE 802.15.4a-2007. For this purpose, the location receivers are also capable of transmitting messages. Hence the location receivers of this system might actually be called location transceivers. A drawback of the approach disclosed in US 2008/0095131 A1 lies in the fact that the accuracy of the two-way ranging will strongly depend on the accuracy of the time bases of the location receivers involved. Furthermore, this approach puts additional hardware complexity and additional processing load on the location receivers by requiring the handling of the two-way ranging process, which consumes additional airtime and energy.
According a first aspect of the present invention, a method for determining an instantaneous phase difference ĈA
The present invention discloses methods including a real-time locating method and a real-time locating system, which eliminate the need for using reference tags and which yields synchronization between location anchors free of multipath error even without requiring additional measurements. Instead of performing additional measurements, a time base difference free of multipath error is calculated based on pairs of measured TDOA values subject to multipath error. Thus, air time used for location anchor synchronization is minimized and the capacity of location tags in the system can be maximized.
The method of the first aspect of the invention allows determining an estimate of the instantaneous phase difference between the time bases of location anchors. This estimate is not affected by multipath error, and is also not affected by errors in determining the propagation time of the signal over the geometrical distance.
The method provides a basis for numerous advantageous embodiments, which, for instance determining a precise distance of a location tag from location anchors, or determining a precise position of a location tag, or other location-related information. Furthermore, the disclosed method is capable of generating detailed information on the multipath situation, in which the system is operated, by determining the value of a multipath error for the exchange between different or all possible pairs of location anchors.
Since the method works per location anchor pair, the disclosed invention can easily be applied to small systems which contain at least two anchors as well as to large and very large systems with in principle unlimited numbers of location anchors distributed over a wide spatial area.
A location anchor according to the present invention may be implemented in various forms and using one or more different technologies for communication of broadcast messages. In one embodiment, the location anchor is implemented in a fixed network node of a long-range radio access network operating in accordance with a wireless communication standard, such as, for instance, GSM, UMTS or LTE. As such, the location anchor may be implemented for example in the form of a base station or Node B. In another embodiment, the location anchor is implemented in a fixed network node of a local wireless network installation using for instance a short-range radio network communication technology standard such as Bluetooth, ZigBEE, Wireless LAN/Wi-Fi, or WPAN. “Fixed” means that the respective location anchor is not in motion with respect to the other location anchors involved in the processing of the method according to the present invention. In most application cases, the location anchors involved are installed at respective locations known to the location server and do not move at all during operation.
Different clock model functions may be of same function type, i.e., show the same type of dependence (linear, quadratic, etc.) on time t, but may be shifted along the vertical axis (ordinate) with respect to with each other. As such, they may also be referred to as different clock model function realizations of the same clock model function.
According to an embodiment of the method of the invention, the first and second clock model functions are linear functions. Calculating the instantaneous phase difference (ĈA
In a further embodiment, at least three locations anchors, in respective pairwise associations, broadcast and receive broadcast messages, and provide their TOA stamps to the location server. The method of this embodiment further comprises determining respective instantaneous phase differences of the time bases of the different pairs of the location anchors, by performing the method according to any embodiment of the first aspect of the invention individually for the different location anchor pairs.
The time of reception to be included in a TOA stamp pertaining to a reception of a broadcast message sent by a subject location anchor itself may in one embodiment be determined by receiving the broadcast message via an antenna separate from an antenna used for transmitting the broadcast message.
In a further embodiment, the location anchor determines a time of transmission of the broadcast message, and the time of reception is estimated by the location anchor being equal to the time of transmission.
In a further embodiment, which may be used in combination with anyone of the preceding embodiments, the following steps are additionally performed:
According a second aspect of the present invention, a method for determining a difference of distances of a location tag from at least two location anchors is provided, the location of the location tag being unknown and the respective locations of the location anchors being known to a location server. The method comprises:
According to a third aspect of the invention, a method for determining a location of a location tag in terms of an at least one-dimensional coordinate system comprises
According to a fourth aspect of the invention, a method for operating a location server in determining an instantaneous phase difference between time bases of at least two location anchors at a desired point in time t, each location anchor having a respective time base for measuring time comprises:
An embodiment of this method comprises
A further embodiment comprises
According to another embodiment, the method of any of the previous embodiments of the present aspect of the invention further comprises
According to a fifth aspect of the invention, a method for operating a location server in determining a difference of distances of a location tag from at least two location anchors, the location of the location tag being unknown and the respective locations of the location anchors being known to a location server. The method comprises
According to a sixth aspect of the invention, a method for operating a location anchor in determining an instantaneous phase difference between time bases of at least two location anchors at a desired point in time (t), each of the location anchors having transmitting and receiving access to a joint broadcast transmission medium and a respective time base for measuring time. The method comprises:
In one embodiment, this method further comprises
A seventh aspect of the present invention is formed by a location server. The location server comprises:
In one embodiment, the location server is configured to determine a difference of distances of a location tag from at least two location anchors, the location of the location tag being unknown and the respective locations of the location anchors being known to a location server, wherein
An embodiment of the location server further comprises
Further aspects of the present invention are related to computer program products, performing the steps of the method of one of the embodiments of the method of the fourth aspect of the invention, when said product is run on a computer.
Yet further aspects of the present invention are related to computer program products, performing the steps of the method of one of the embodiments of the fifth aspect of the invention, when said product is run on a computer.
In the following, further embodiments of the various aspects of the present invention are described. It is noted that the additional features of different embodiments may be combined with each other to form further embodiments, unless these additional features are mutually exclusive and can only be used in alternative embodiments.
The calculation of the instantaneous phase difference based on the determined parameters of the first and second clock model function realizations can be performed in different ways.
In one form by the location server calculating an estimate of an initial offset difference of the time bases of the first and second location anchors at a reference point in time from only the determined offset parameters of the first and second clock model function; and by the location server calculating an instantaneous phase difference from the estimated initial offset difference of the time bases of the first and second location anchors, from at least one of the determined slope parameters of the first and second clock model function realizations, and from a time elapsed between the reference point in time and the desired point in time t.
The multipath error may be determined by the location error in the following way: the location server determining a multipath error of the reception time at the desired point in time, by
A location anchor may at the same time function as a location server.
An arrangement employing at least one of the various aspects of the present invention may comprise an arbitrary number of location anchors.
In an arrangement comprising a larger number of location anchors, such as, by way of example only, more than 3, or more than 10, or more than 20, more than 100, or more than 1000, the pairwise synchronization of the location anchors for a time t, in other words, determining an instantaneous phase difference (ĈA
In another embodiment, a multipath delay between a pair of location anchors determined by using an embodiment of the present invention is used to correct a determined TDOA pertaining to the reception of a tag message at different ones of the location anchors. To this end, for each of the TOA stamps received, the location server uses the determined multipath error of a location anchor pair that contains the location anchor receiving the tag message and a location anchor that is arranged near a last determined position of the location tag.
The aspects and embodiments of the present invention may use any physical transmission medium for implementing a broadcast channel. For instance, a broadcast message may be sent by means of sound waves, ultrasound waves, electromagnetic waves, radio frequency electromagnetic waves, the radio frequency being for instance 2.4 GHz, ultra wideband electromagnetic waves, light waves.
A first embodiment of the invention is depicted in
The location anchors 200 are capable of wirelessly transmitting signals. Each or at least some of the location anchors 200 are also capable of receiving wirelessly transmitted signals or messages from other location anchors 200, and they are capable of receiving wirelessly transmitted signals or messages from location tags 102, the position of which is initially unknown and which are thus to be located.
Furthermore the location anchors 200 are capable of transmitting messages. However, this capability is used completely different from prior-art systems described in the introductory part of the present specification as background art.
The location anchors 200 generate time of arrival stamps (TOAs) for messages they receive, and they also generate additional TOAs for messages they transmit. This is indicated by a self reception arrow 205. It is important to note that those additional TOAs have little or no multipath error, because the transmission path from the transmission antenna to the reception antenna (which may even be implemented by only one antenna) is not subject to significant multipath effects.
Each location anchor 200 is equipped with some kind of time base. Typically a crystal oscillator is used.
In order to fully and precisely describe the invention, a time base model will be defined in the following. The commonly used, simple model which describes a time base based on two parameters, start offset and frequency error, is sufficient here. Of course, a time base model of higher complexity would result in more complex calculations, but would in the end yield similar or same results in the context of the present invention.
We define:
CA
where
In other words, the instantaneous phase of the time base of a location anchor is a time value that the time base of the location anchor provides at a given time value of the true reference time.
TA
Typically the absolute value of the frequency error is below a known limit, e.g., a tolerance of a crystal. Due to changes in temperature, supply voltage etc. it will vary randomly but slowly.
Although the number of location anchors usable by the invention is not limited, for explanatory purposes the calculation involved will be derived for a minimum embodiment with two location anchors A1 and A2 as depicted in
With (1) and
TA
eA
where
Every once in a while each location anchor wirelessly transmits a message which can be received by one or more location anchors. It is irrelevant how the transmission is triggered (random, deterministic, synchronized or other). Each of the N location anchors, which receive the message, generates a TOA stamp, with respect to its individual time base.
It is important to note that the transmitting location anchor also generates a TOA stamp for the message transmitted by this very location anchor itself. Several possibilities for generating this special TOA stamp exist. For example, this TOA stamp can be derived from the time of transmission. As an alternative, it can be generated by a receiver, to which the propagation delay and multipath delay are either zero, for instance because it is co-located with the transmitting part of the location anchor, or to which the propagation delay and multipath delay are exactly known. The receiver must be active during transmission of the message.
It is assumed in the following, that location anchor A1 has transmitted a broadcast message at t=t1 and that it has generated the TOA stamp TOAA
Without loss of generality and only for reasons of clarity, we can assume that the time base of anchor A1 is absolutely correct, which means that the location anchor A1 has the ‘true’ time. Hence we can write:
TA
eA
Using (1) and (4) we get for a transmission of a message from location anchor A1 at t=t1 for the TOA stamp at location anchor A1:
TOAA
Using (1), (2) and (4) we get for a transmission of the same message from location anchor A1 at t=t1 for the TOA stamp at location anchor A2:
TOAA
wherein
For most wireless media it is reasonable to assume reciprocal propagation of signals. Thus we can write:
TA
TA
Using (5), (6) and (7) the Time Difference Of Arrival between location anchors A1 and A2 for the message transmitted by the location anchor A1 at time t1 can be calculated as follows:
TDOAA
This yields
TDOAA
It should be noted that, since the terms TA
TDOAA
This means that from at least two measurements of TDOAA
{circumflex over (k)}A
ŝA
The symbol “^” is used here for indicating that the respective value is an estimate. In other words, the estimate {circumflex over (k)}A
Similarly as above, for the transmission of the broadcast message from location anchor A2 at t=t2:
TOAA
TOAA
and the corresponding TDOA for the message transmitted by the location anchor A2 at the time t2 is:
TDOAA
Estimating the parameters yields
{circumflex over (k)}A
ŝA
Since TA
Equation (15) yields an estimate for the initial offset between the time bases of the two location anchors A1 and A2. It is to be pointed out that the estimate is not affected by multipath error TA
If TA
Regarding the slope of the lines it is possible to utilize the fact that both lines should have the same slope and thus two independent estimates for one parameter are available and can for example be averaged in order to further reduce the estimation error as indicated in equation (17)
With the estimates obtained up to equation (15) it is now possible to calculate an estimate for the instantaneous phase difference between the time bases of the two location anchors A1 and A2 at any time t. For example either equation (18) or (19) could be used
ĈA
ĈA
A potentially even better estimate is obtained when the result from equation (17) is used. This yields equation (20):
ĈA
Of course the same result would be obtained if the values at time t of the functions defined in equations (9) and (13) were estimated first and then averaged. This shown in equation (21)
It should be emphasized that the above equations, which were derived for one location anchor pair, can be applied to any location anchor pair in which the location anchors receive messages from each other in a system with an arbitrary number N of location anchors. Thus, information on time-base differences and multipath error between many or all location-anchor pairs is available.
In the use case of a real-time locating system additionally comprising a location tag, wherein the location of the location tag is unknown and the respective positions of the first and second location anchors are known to a location server, if a message from a location tag is received by a location anchor pair at time t—wherein any of the location anchors may serve as a time reference for t, irrespective of its correctness in terms of true time, because what matters in the present context is only the difference in respective times of the respective time bases of the location anchors—, the multipath-error free synchronization correction value between the two location anchors can be estimated and subtracted from the TDOA measured for the location tag. This yields a TDOA estimate or, after multiplying with the propagation speed, distance difference for the location tag with none or minimum synchronization error. For further processing of the TDOA values of location tags and/or for improvement of the location estimate of location tags the multipath information from equation (16) will be useful.
Detailed Description of
From time to time each location anchor 200 transmits a message, which is received by other (not necessarily all) location anchors 200. The timing for transmitting may be independent or coordinated between the location anchors. Location anchors 200 generate a TOA stamp 402 for each message which they receive. For messages which they transmit they also generate TOA stamps 401 which match the TOA stamp they would have generated if they had received the message over their reception antenna without any or with negligible multipath delay.
After two location anchors have received at least two messages from each other and the respective TOA stamps have been gathered in one place, typically the location server, the method disclosed in this invention can be applied. Further messages can be processed similarly in order to update and improve results.
Location anchors typically report the TOA stamps (TOAs) they generate to the location server together with information on the originating source of the message and other information like message ids. In the example here messages send out from a location anchor are enumerated with a counter which is given in brackets in order to identify a TOA stamp. E.g. TOAA
Detailed Description of
In the next step some or all possible TDOAs in-between location anchor pairs are calculated from the TOAs 503.
Further processing depends on the type of source of the originating message for which the TOAs were generated.
If the message for which the TOAs have been generated, was transmitted by a location anchor, the resulting TDOAs are used for estimating the parameters of time base differences in-between the location anchor pairs like indicated in equations (11) and (14). At this point these parameter estimates are still subject to multipath error 504. Such estimation can be achieved by state of the art techniques like Kalman filtering or others. It is also possible to collect time series of TDOAs for location anchor pairs and update the estimation once in a while using all or some of the collected TDOAs.
If on the other hand the message was transmitted by a location tag, the instantaneous multipath error free phase differences for some or all location anchor pairs are calculated 505 using the method indicated by equation (18) or (19) or (20) or (21).
By applying (e.g. subtracting) the synchronisation correction values from the TDOAs of the location tag obtained in 503 synchronization error free TDOA values for the location tag are obtained 507.
In an enhanced embodiment further steps are taken:
Using the estimates obtained in 504 and applying equation (16) the multipath errors in-between anchor pairs are explicitly found 510. The multipath information found in 510 can either be passed up or it can be used immediately. Since the TDOA values of the location tags are still subject to multipath error between location tag and location anchors, there is a potential to reduce this multipath error. For example by utilizing the statistical correlation of multipath errors between different locations in one environment the TDOA values of the location tags can be reduced by a certain amount based on the multipath error determined between location anchors 511.
Detailed Description of
As indicated in
Detailed Description of
As has been shown in equation (3) the time base difference between two location anchors changes over time but it can be modelled in a as a simple function e.g. as a straight line at least within a certain time interval of observation.
In case A1 is the originator the TDOAs TDOAA
A location server, according to an embodiment of the present invention, is shown in
The location server 204 is configured to determine a difference of distances of a location tag from at least two location anchors, the location of the location tag being unknown and the respective locations of the location anchors being known to a location server, wherein the transmitting/receiving part 210 is configured to receive, from the first and second location anchors, tag TOA stamps, which are indicative of a first and second time of reception of the tag message broadcast by the location tag at the first and second location anchor, respectively, in terms of the time base of the first and second location anchor, respectively. The phase-difference determination unit 240 is also configured to determine an instantaneous phase difference between time bases of the first and second location anchors for the time at which the tag message has been received by one of the anchors. The TDOA unit 220 is configured to determine a TDOA value for the tag message from the first and second TOA stamps and to correct the determined TDOA value by the determined instantaneous phase difference, thus obtaining a corrected TDOA value. The location server 204 also comprises a locating unit 250 configured to determine a difference in distance of the location tag from the first and second location anchor, using the corrected TDOA value and a known speed of signal propagation within a broadcast medium used by the first and second location anchors and by the location tag.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11166284 | May 2011 | EP | regional |
11181681 | Sep 2011 | EP | regional |
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Number | Date | Country |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130021206 A1 | Jan 2013 | US |