Smart Lighting Networks in the InterNet of Things Era November 12 2013 J. van der Pol, Colin Faulkner BL Emerging Business E. Boswinkel, D. van den Broeke BL Power & Lighting Solutions NXP Semiconductors
Outline The Internet-of-Things and Smart Lighting NXP Smart Lighting Network Solutions How do Sensors fit in? Summary COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 2
The Internet of Things and Smart Lighting
34% World Population now Internet Connected Source: KPCB Internet Trends report 2012 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 4 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
Installed Base Smart Mobiles now Exceeds PCs Source: KPCB Internet Trends report 2012 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 5 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
There will be no end to Connectivity The Internet of Things will drive semiconductor growth Things Bringing the industry over $400Bn NUMBER of CONNECTED DEVICES (B units) and doubling IP device volumes 25-50 Industrials Smart phones/ Consumer electronics ~35% ~30% Consumer Electronics Buildings PC Mobile "Things" Mobiles/ gaming consoles ~1 9-12 ~10% ~10% ~5% ~10% Utilities/ energy Automotive Healthcare Other PCs 2000 2005 2010 2015 early 2000s 2011 2020 2020 Internet of Things connections Source: WSTS (extrapolated after 2011), Cisco, Machina Research / GSMA Note: connected devices = Connections to remote sensing, monitoring and actuating devices, together with associated aggregation devices COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL
The Smart Home Vision: Networking, Interacting with the outside world Smart lighting creates the network backbone for broader consumer adoption Potential for smart household nodes Units (based on conventional 2010) Lighting 70-90 Consumer Electronics Electricity control Climate control Security 20-30 30-40 10-15 ~10 Other ~10 Total per household Need for a low-cost, easy-to-install, wireless connectivity solution 150-200 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL
Smart Home Network Architecture High Bandwidth, High Power, High Cost Devices Tablet Smartphone WiFi & Ethernet (+BT, USB, PLC) PC SmartTV Gateway Security Camera Bridge / dongle Lighting/ switches Home monitoring (security, fire) 802.15.4 / Jennet-IP / Zigbee HA/LL Electricity metering and control Narrow Band, Low Power, Low Cost Devices Climate control/ sensor networks Others (Health, garden, ) COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL
Why it s Happening Now? Software and hardware innovation are removing barriers to adoption Cost: from 2-3x a conventional device towards a 20% price adder Convenience: Network performance that meets consumer expectations simple installation, no latency, perfect security, internet access, easy-to-use apps, Compatible with existing infrastructure Guaranteed interoperability, open standards e.g. TCLA initiative for residential lighting Architecture recognizes the need for both high and low bandwidth applications (power, speed & coverage) Smart Lighting creates network backbone while the market prepares for growth Positive customer attitude Pervasive smartphone & tablet penetration & User-friendly apps Recognizing benefits and willingness to pay additional cost New technical developments Smart lighting as backbone (Cloud) applications LED lighting penetration and lamp lifetime (amortization cost) New partnerships Service-model MSO s & utilities offer HA systems to increase ARPU and customer loyalty EcoSystems (e.g., WeMo Belkin, Hue Philips, Iris Lowes, ) Lots of valuable user data. COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL
Wireless Smart Lighting Networks COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL LPRF Advanced Wireless Lighting Control 11
Main Drivers & Benefits of Smart Lighting Lighting represents one of the world s greatest opportunities for energy savings and mitigating the risk governments & utilities face meeting the growing electricity demand (population, economy, electric vehicles ) >12B bulbs sold worldwide each year and 25% of home electricity usage is from lighting sensors play a vital role in capturing the opportunity courtesy: Zumtobel, SL2013 conference Frankfurt COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 12
Smart Lighting Smart Home NXP enabling Smart Lighting/ Home Automation Thermostats, Blinds. Gateway 1) Router WWW IP-cameras, Doorphones. Smart Lamps Controls, Sensors, Switches PC, Smartphone, Tablets 1) courtesy partner COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 13
Wireless Smart Lighting System - Overview No cables, flexible and scalable, compatible with existing infrastructure Easily controlled by IP-enabled devices like smartphones, tablets, PC both home (LAN) and away (WAN) or locally with RF remote controls or (energy harvesting) switches Future-proof development with Over- Network-Download capability Simple, secure commissioning; self healing; instant rejoin Ultralow standby power when lamp is off, energy efficient SW agnostic: ZigBee, JenNet-IP,. COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 14
NXP Provides Complete HW & SW Ref Designs issl low cost modules ( 17x20x57mm) icfl modules IoT gateway Switch & captouch remote control Power supply & radio retrofit modules Turnkey solutions for SSL & CFL, (EH-)switch, (captouch) remote control & IoT gateway schematics, BOM, gerbers, SW, antenna design, range of options (isolation, 110/230V, PF,..) white, tunable white & RGB lamps cloud services via partners High performance best energy efficiency of lamp in on- and off-mode (140mW stdby) small size, low BOM multi-year battery lifetime RC/SW Wireless modules RF modules for white & RGB lamps 0-10V analog dimming output for brick ballasts Networking software 802.15.4 based: ZigBee LightLink, HA & GreenPower 6LowPAN/Jennet-IP COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 15
Integration with All Lighting Lamps & Fixtures LED Grids CFL lamps HF-TL lamps Axx SSL lamps PARxx SSL lamps LED Tubes MR16 SSL lamps LED Panels COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 17
NXP s Smart Lighting Solutions Examples Hardware Reference Designs COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL LPRF Advanced Wireless Lighting Control 18
NXP Low Cost Smart Tunable White Bulb White color temperature adjustable LED lamp mimics color temperature of an incandescent lamp when dimming - gets warmer Low cost BOM cost adder vs white lamp only $0.20 full brightness color temperature 2700K dimming to 5% color temperature 2200K Both white & amber LED fully utilized at maximum brightness best lumen/$ COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 19 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
MR16 Small Form Factor Wireless Lamps MR16 230V GU10 MR16 12V GU5.3 Using NXP SSL21x9 LED driver and JN516x wireless IEEE802.15.4 (ZigBee) microcontroller Total BOM cost adder of adding wireless funtionality 2$ Smallest wireless lamp in the world Design by TSR using thermally enhanced plastics allowing easy antenna integration COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 20 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
Lamp Control by Energy-Harvesting Switches No Batteries, No Wires!!! Energy harvesting switch from partners ZF / Cherry and EnOcean in Germany pressing the switch generates enough energy to transmit multiple radio packets Enabled by JN5161 ultra low power wireless microcontroller (transmit current only 15mA) same range as main powered switch No batteries so zero maintenance On/Off and dimming functionality Software support for : ZigBee GreenPower with ZigBee LightLink and Home Automation JenNet-IP COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 22 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
NXP IoT Gateway Ref Design Commercially available via LiSeng in HK Low Cost Ethernet to IEEE802.15.4 Bridge Firmware supports ZigBee HA ZigBee-LL JenNet-IP LPC3240 ARM9 JN5168 RF-micro Can merge ZB-LL and ZB-HA device into one network without need for additional radios => interoperability & dual stack functionality COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 23 Cloud connect to JenNet-IP - NXP LPRF April 11, 2013
How to really make it the Internet-of-Things? Use networking radio standard (like Zigbee ZLL/ZHA or NXP 6LowPAN/ JenNet-IP ) in combination with Internet Protocol (IPv6) Then every device (e.g. Light) will have its own IP-address Internet Local Area Network (IPv4 and IPv6) JenNet-IP Low Power Network Cloud Service Partners GreenWave IQLogic Ayla Nabto.. Tablet Mobile internet 3G Remote Control Node Wall Switch/Dimmer Node Smart Phone Home Router IP Bridge Node Node Node Smart Phone PC WIFI TV Tablet established routes self repair routes Game Console standalone operation gateway operation COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL
Role of Sensors in Smart Lighting Networks COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL LPRF Advanced Wireless Lighting Control 25
Sensors Key to Energy Saving in SL Systems Presence & time based management Daylight Harvesting Dimming Maintenance control Occupancy sensors Ambient light sensors Temperature sensors source: D.C. Meyer, Zumtobel, SL2013 conference Frankfurt COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 26 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
Smart Lighting Energy Savings - Theory Smart lighting enables four different energy saving options: presence detection daylight harvesting in combination with dimming time based lighting control maintenance control adjusting light output to aging of luminaire Daylight harvesting allows most savings while maintaining comfort for the user Combined together these 4 can lead in theory to 70% savings source: D.C. Meyer, Zumtobel, SL2013 conference Frankfurt COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 27 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
Smart Lighting Energy Savings Reality before after Office building Barcelona refurbished with lighting and blinds (slats) control Lighting control achieves 25% total energy savings lighting and HVAC with blinds control even 30% source: D.C. Meyer, Zumtobel, SL2013 conference Frankfurt COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 28 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
Summary COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL LPRF Advanced Wireless Lighting Control 29
Smart Lighting Cornerstone of IoT Growth Range of robust and affordable wireless smart lighting systems commercially available now TCP Internet Lighting System, Philips Hue, Greenwave Connected Lighting Solution NXP enables several of these systems by providing full suite of HW & SW solutions Can serve as backbone for an IoT network in the home or in commercial/industrial Provides significant economic pay off, reduced carbon footprint and enhanced consumer experience up to 30% energy savings proven Helps utility companies face the new challenges of an ever increasing energy demand & differentiate Smart lighting installations evolving into full home automation systems adding security, energy management and HVAC Allows MSO s (cable/phone companies, retailers,..) to add new usage models and increase ARPU & customer loyalty and thus decrease expensive churn COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 30 Subject / Department / Author - November 10, 2013
Questions? 31 November, NXP LPRF 2012
COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL LPRF Advanced Wireless Lighting Control 32