ZigBee

This article is about a wireless protocol. For the fictional character, see Zigby.
ZigBee

A ZigBee module
International standard IEEE 802.15.4
Developed by ZigBee Alliance
Industry Industrial, scientific and medical
Physical range 10 to 20 meters (approx)

ZigBee [1] is an IEEE 802.15.4-based specification for a suite of high-level communication protocols used to create personal area networks with small, low-power digital radios, such as for home automation, medical device data collection, and other low-power low-bandwidth needs.

The technology defined by the ZigBee specification is intended to be simpler and less expensive than other wireless personal area networks (WPANs), such as Bluetooth or Wi-Fi. Applications include wireless light switches, electrical meters with in-home-displays, traffic management systems, and other consumer and industrial equipment that requires short-range low-rate wireless data transfer.

Its low power consumption limits transmission distances to 10–100 meters line-of-sight, depending on power output and environmental characteristics.[2] ZigBee devices can transmit data over long distances by passing data through a mesh network of intermediate devices to reach more distant ones. ZigBee is typically used in low data rate applications that require long battery life and secure networking (ZigBee networks are secured by 128 bit symmetric encryption keys.) ZigBee has a defined rate of 250 kbit/s, best suited for intermittent data transmissions from a sensor or input device.

ZigBee was conceived in 1998, standardized in 2003, and revised in 2006. The name refers to the waggle dance of honey bees after their return to the beehive.[3]

Overview

ZigBee is a low-cost, low-power, wireless mesh network standard targeted at the wide development of long battery life devices in wireless control and monitoring applications. Zigbee devices have low latency, which further reduces average current. ZigBee chips are typically integrated with radios and with microcontrollers that have between 60-256 KB of flash memory. ZigBee operates in the industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) radio bands: 2.4 GHz in most jurisdictions worldwide; 784 MHz in China, 868 MHz in Europe and 915 MHz in the USA and Australia. Data rates vary from 20 kbit/s (868 MHz band) to 250 kbit/s (2.4 GHz band).

The ZigBee network layer natively supports both star and tree networks, and generic mesh networking. Every network must have one coordinator device, tasked with its creation, the control of its parameters and basic maintenance. Within star networks, the coordinator must be the central node. Both trees and meshes allow the use of ZigBee routers to extend communication at the network level.

ZigBee builds on the physical layer and media access control defined in IEEE standard 802.15.4 for low-rate WPANs. The specification includes four additional key components: network layer, application layer, ZigBee device objects (ZDOs) and manufacturer-defined application objects which allow for customization and favor total integration. ZDOs are responsible for some tasks, including keeping track of device roles, managing requests to join a network, as well as device discovery and security.

ZigBee is one of the global standards of communication protocol formulated by the significant task force under the IEEE 802.15 working group. The fourth in the series, WPAN Low Rate/ZigBee is the newest and provides specifications for devices that have low data rates, consume very low power and are thus characterized by long battery life. Other standards like Bluetooth and IrDA address high data rate applications such as voice,[4] video and LAN communications.

History

ZigBee-style self-organizing ad-hoc digital radio networks were conceived in the 1990s. The IEEE 802.15.4-2003 ZigBee specification was ratified on December 14, 2004.[5] The ZigBee Alliance announced availability of Specification 1.0 on June 13, 2005, known as the ZigBee 2004 Specification.

Cluster Library

In September 2006, the ZigBee 2006 Specification was announced, obsoleting the 2004 stack[6] (2006 mainly replaces the Message/Key Value Pair structure used in 2004 with a "cluster library").

The library is a set of standardised commands, organised under groups known as clusters with names such as Smart Energy, Home Automation, ZigBee Light Link.[7]

ZigBee PRO

ZigBee PRO, also known as Zigbee 2007, the enhanced ZigBee Pro Specification, was posted on 31 October 2007, and was finalized that same year. ZigBee PRO is fully backward-compatible with ZigBee 2006 devices. A ZigBee 2007 device may join and operate on a ZigBee 2006 network and vice versa. Due to differences in routing options, ZigBee PRO devices must become non-routing ZigBee End-Devices (ZEDs) on a ZigBee 2006 network, and ZigBee 2006 devices must become ZEDs on a ZigBee PRO network. The applications running on those devices work the same, regardless of the stack profile beneath them. The first ZigBee Application Profile, Home Automation, was announced November 2, 2007.

Use cases

ZigBee protocols are intended for embedded applications requiring low power consumption and tolerating low data rates. The resulting network will use very small amounts of power — individual devices must have a battery life of at least two years to pass ZigBee certification.[8]

Typical application areas include:[9]

Standard and profiles

The ZigBee Alliance is a group of companies that maintain and publish the ZigBee standard.[12] The term ZigBee is a registered trademark of this group, not a single technical standard. The Alliance publishes application profiles that allow multiple OEM vendors to create interoperable products. The relationship between IEEE 802.15.4 and ZigBee[13] is similar to that between IEEE 802.11 and the Wi-Fi Alliance.

License

For non-commercial purposes, the ZigBee specification is available free to the general public.[14] An entry level membership in the ZigBee Alliance, called Adopter, provides access to the as-yet unpublished specifications and permission to create products for market using the specifications.

The requirements for membership in the ZigBee Alliance cause problems for Free Software developers because the annual fee conflicts with the GNU General Public Licence.[15] The requirement for the developer to join the ZigBee Alliance similarly conflicts with most other free software licenses.[16]

The ZigBee Alliance board has been asked to make their license compatible with GPL, but refused. The refusal came, even though Bluetooth had already changed their license to make it consistent with GPL.

Application profiles

The current list of application profiles either published, or in development are:

Released specifications

Specifications under development

The ZigBee Smart Energy V2.0 specifications define an Internet protocol to monitor, control, inform and automate the delivery and use of energy and water. It is an enhancement of the ZigBee Smart Energy version 1 specifications.[17] It adds services for plug-in electric vehicle charging, installation, configuration and firmware download, prepay services, user information and messaging, load control, demand response and common information and application profile interfaces for wired and wireless networks. It is being developed by partners including:

ZigBee Smart Energy relies on ZigBee IP, a network layer that routes standard IPv6 traffic over IEEE 802.15.4 using 6LoWPAN header compression.[18][19]

In 2009, the RF4CE (Radio Frequency for Consumer Electronics) Consortium and ZigBee Alliance agreed to deliver jointly a standard for radio frequency remote controls. ZigBee RF4CE is designed for a broad range of consumer electronics products, such as TVs and set-top boxes. It promised many advantages over existing remote control solutions, including richer communication and increased reliability, enhanced features and flexibility, interoperability, and no line-of-sight barrier.[20] The ZigBee RF4CE specification lifts off some networking weight and does not support all the mesh features, which is traded for smaller memory configurations for lower cost devices, such as remote control of consumer electronics.

With the introduction of the second ZigBee RF4CE application profile in 2012 and increased momentum in MSO market, the ZigBee RF4CE team provides an overview on current status of the standard, applications, and future of the technology.[21][22]

Radio hardware

The radio design used by ZigBee has been carefully optimized for low cost in large scale production. It has few analog stages and uses digital circuits wherever possible.

Though the radios themselves are inexpensive, the ZigBee Qualification Process involves a full validation of the requirements of the physical layer. All radios derived from the same validated semiconductor mask set would enjoy the same RF characteristics. An uncertified physical layer that malfunctions could cripple the battery lifespan of other devices on a ZigBee network. ZigBee radios have very tight constraints on power and bandwidth. Thus, radios are tested with guidance given by Clause 6 of the 802.15.4-2006 Standard. Most vendors plan to integrate the radio and microcontroller onto a single chip[23] getting smaller devices.[24]

This standard specifies operation in the unlicensed 2.4 GHz (worldwide), 915 MHz (Americas and Australia) and 868 MHz (Europe) ISM bands. Sixteen channels are allocated in the 2.4 GHz band, with each channel spaced 5 MHz apart, though using only 2 MHz of bandwidth. The radios use direct-sequence spread spectrum coding, which is managed by the digital stream into the modulator. Binary phase-shift keying (BPSK) is used in the 868 and 915 MHz bands, and offset quadrature phase-shift keying (OQPSK) that transmits four bits per symbol is used in the 2.4 GHz band.

The raw, over-the-air data rate is 250 kbit/s per channel in the 2.4 GHz band, 40 kbit/s per channel in the 915 MHz band, and 20 kbit/s in the 868 MHz band. The actual data throughput will be less than the maximum specified bit rate due to the packet overhead and processing delays. For indoor applications at 2.4 GHz transmission distance may be 10–20 m, depending on the construction materials, the number of walls to be penetrated and the output power permitted in that geographical location.[25] Outdoors with line-of-sight, range may be up to 1500 m depending on power output and environmental characteristics[2]. The output power of the radios is generally 0-20 dBm (1-100 mW).

Example commercial SOCs

Vendor Part Number Package Band Active Rx Current Active Tx Current PM1 Current RAM Flash Processor Interfaces
Microchip MRF24J40[26] 40-pin leadless QFN 6x6 mm² package 2.4 GHz 19 mA (-94 dBm to +5 dBm) 23 mA (+0 dBm), 2 µA (µs wake) 912 B Transceiver only SPI
Texas Instruments CC2650[27] 4x4 and 5x5 32-pin QFN, 7x7 48-pin QFN 2.4 GHz 5.9 mA (-97 dBm) 6.1 mA (+0 dBm), 9.1 mA (+5 dBm) 0.55 mA (14 µs wake) or 0.027 mA (151 µs wake) 20 kB SRAM + 8 kB SRAM cache 128 kB 48 MHz ARM Cortex-M3 UART, I2C, I2S, 2xSPI, 12-bit ADC, 10/15/31 GPIO, Sensor Controller Engine, Temperature & Battery monitor, also supports Bluetooth Smart (BLE) and 6LoWPAN
Silicon Labs EM358x[28] 7x7 48-pin QFN 2.4 GHz 27 mA (-100 dBm) 31 mA (+3 dBm) 1 µA 32-64 kB 256-512 kB 6/12/24 MHz Cortex-M3 USB2.0, UART, 2xSPI, 24 GPIO, up to 8dBm PA
Silicon Labs EFR32MGxxxxx[29] 5x5 32-pin QFN, 7x7 48-pin QFN 2.4 GHz, sub 1 GHz (Single or Dual PHY) 8.7 mA (-99 dBm) @2.4 GHz, 8.1 mA (-121.4 dBm) @868 MHz 8.2 mA (+0 dBm), 32.7 mA (+10.5 dBm), 126.7 mA (+19.5 dBm) 1.4 uA (3 µs wake in EM2), 0.58 uA (60 µs wake in EM4H) 32 kB 256 kB 40 MHz Cortex-M4F LEUART, 2xUSART, I2C, 31 GPIO, 12bit ADC, 12ch PRS, HW Crypto (AES/ECC/SHA), up to +19.5dBm PA, also supports BT-SMART (BLE), Thread (6LoWPAN), WMBus
Marvell 88MZ100[30] 5.3x5.3 48-pin QFN 2.4 GHz 14 mA (-104 dBm) 26 mA (+9 dBm) 160 kB 512 kB 32/64 MHz Cortex-M3 2xUART, 2xSPI, 2xI2C, 31 GPIO
Freescale MC1323x[31] 7x7 48-pin LGA 2.4 GHz 34 mA (-94 dBm) 27 mA (0 dBm) 0.45 uA 8 kB 128 kB 32 MHz HCS08QE UART, SPI, I2C, 32 GPIO
NXP JN-516x[32] 16x30 27-pin module 2.4 GHz 17 mA (-95 dBm) 15 mA (+2.5 dBm) 0.12 uA 8-32 kB 64-256 kB 32 MHz 2xUART, SPI, 2xI2C, 20 GPIO
Atmel ATZB-24-B0[33] 18x13.5 48-pin module 2.4 GHz 21.8 mA (-101 dBm) 20.8 mA (0 dBm) 6 µA 8 kB 128 kB 4 MHz ATmega1281V USB2.0, UART, USART, I2C, SPI, 30 GPIO
Telink TLSR8636[34] 7x7 48-pin TQFN, 5x5 32-pin TQFN 2.4 GHz 12 mA (-99 dBm) 12 mA (0 dBm) 1 µA 16 kB 512 kB 48 MHz 32bit MCU USB2.0, UART, I2C, SPI, 35/20 GPIO depending on package
Qorvo GP691[35] 5x5 32-pin QFN 2.4 GHz 12 mA (-96 dBm) 18 mA (+0 dBm), 29 mA (+7 dBm) 1 µA (2 ms wake) or 0.72 mA (1 µs wake) 16 KB RAM 248 KB XAP5 16/32-bit SPI, I2C, UART, 16 GPIO, 2 ANIO, 10-bit ADC, keyboard scanner, IR generator, 4-channel 16-bit PWM, 4 LED driver, temperature sensor, battery monitor, antenna diversity

Device types and operating modes

ZigBee devices are of three kinds:

The current ZigBee protocols support beacon and non-beacon enabled networks. In non-beacon-enabled networks, an unspotted CSMA/CA channel access mechanism is used. In this type of network, ZigBee Routers typically have their receivers continuously active, requiring a more robust power supply. However, this allows for heterogeneous networks in which some devices receive continuously while others only transmit when an external stimulus is detected. The typical example of a heterogeneous network is a wireless light switch: The ZigBee node at the lamp may constantly receive, since it is connected to the mains supply, while a battery-powered light switch would remain asleep until the switch is thrown. The switch then wakes up, sends a command to the lamp, receives an acknowledgment, and returns to sleep. In such a network the lamp node will be at least a ZigBee Router, if not the ZigBee Coordinator; the switch node is typically a ZigBee End Device.

In beacon-enabled networks, the special network nodes called ZigBee Routers transmit periodic beacons to confirm their presence to other network nodes. Nodes may sleep between beacons, thus lowering their duty cycle and extending their battery life. Beacon intervals depend on data rate; they may range from 15.36 milliseconds to 251.65824 seconds at 250 kbit/s, from 24 milliseconds to 393.216 seconds at 40 kbit/s and from 48 milliseconds to 786.432 seconds at 20 kbit/s. However, low duty cycle operation with long beacon intervals requires precise timing, which can conflict with the need for low product cost.

In general, the ZigBee protocols minimize the time the radio is on, so as to reduce power use. In beaconing networks, nodes only need to be active while a beacon is being transmitted. In non-beacon-enabled networks, power consumption is decidedly asymmetrical: Some devices are always active while others spend most of their time sleeping.

Except for the Smart Energy Profile 2.0, ZigBee devices are required to conform to the IEEE 802.15.4-2003 Low-Rate Wireless Personal Area Network (LR-WPAN) standard. The standard specifies the lower protocol layers—the physical layer (PHY), and the Media Access Control portion of the data link layer (DLL). The basic channel access mode is "carrier sense, multiple access/collision avoidance" (CSMA/CA). That is, the nodes talk in the same way that humans converse; they briefly check to see that no one is talking before he or she start, with three notable exceptions. Beacons are sent on a fixed timing schedule and do not use CSMA. Message acknowledgments also do not use CSMA. Finally, devices in beacon-enabled networks that have low latency real-time requirements may also use Guaranteed Time Slots (GTS), which by definition do not use CSMA.

Software

The software is designed to be easy to develop on small, inexpensive microprocessors. For more detail, please use one or more of the sources listed in the References section below, or go directly to the ZigBee Alliance web site using the External links provided below.

Network layer

The main functions of the network layer are to enable the correct use of the MAC sublayer and provide a suitable interface for use by the next upper layer, namely the application layer. Its capabilities and structure are those typically associated to such network layers, including routing.

On the one hand, the data entity creates and manages network layer data units from the payload of the application-layer and performs routing according to the current topology. On the other hand, there is the layer control, which is used to handle configuration of new devices and establish new networks: it can determine whether a neighboring device belongs to the network and discovers new neighbors and routers. The control can also detect the presence of a receiver, which allows direct communication and MAC synchronization.

The routing protocol used by the network layer is AODV. To find the destination device, it broadcasts out a route request to all of its neighbors. The neighbors then broadcast the request to their neighbors and onward until the destination is reached. Once the destination is reached, it sends its route reply via unicast transmission following the lowest cost path back to the source. Once the source receives the reply, it will update its routing table for the destination address of the next hop in the path and the path cost.

Application layer

The application layer is the highest-level layer defined by the specification and is the effective interface of the ZigBee system to its end users. It comprises the majority of components added by the ZigBee specification: both ZDO and its management procedures, together with application objects defined by the manufacturer, are considered part of this layer.

Main components

The ZDO (ZigBee Device Object), a protocol in the ZigBee protocol stack, is responsible for overall device management, security keys, and policies. It is responsible for defining the role of a device as either coordinator or end device, as mentioned above, but also for the discovery of new (one-hop) devices on the network and the identification of their offered services. It may then go on to establish secure links with external devices and reply to binding requests accordingly.

The application support sublayer (APS) is the other main standard component of the layer, and as such it offers a well-defined interface and control services. It works as a bridge between the network layer and the other elements of the application layer: it keeps up-to-date binding tables in the form of a database, which can be used to find appropriate devices depending on the services that are needed and those the different devices offer. As the union between both specified layers, it also routes messages across the layers of the protocol stack.

Communication models

ZigBee, high-level communication model

An application may consist of communicating objects which cooperate to carry out the desired tasks. The focus of ZigBee is to distribute work among many different devices which reside within individual ZigBee nodes which in turn form a network (said work will typically be largely local to each device, for instance, the control of each household appliance).

The collection of objects that form the network communicates using the facilities provided by APS, supervised by ZDO interfaces. The application layer data service follows a typical request-confirm/indication-response structure. Within a single device, up to 240 application objects can exist, numbered in the range 1-240. 0 is reserved for the ZDO data interface and 255 for broadcast; the 241-254 range is not currently in use but may be in the future.

Two services are available for application objects to use (in ZigBee 1.0):

Addressing is also part of the application layer. A network node consists of an 802.15.4-conformant radio transceiver and one or more device descriptions (basically collections of attributes which can be polled or set, or which can be monitored through events). The transceiver is the base for addressing, and devices within a node are specified by an endpoint identifier in the range 1-240.

Communication and device discovery

For applications to communicate, their comprising devices must use a common application protocol (types of messages, formats and so on); these sets of conventions are grouped in profiles. Furthermore, binding is decided upon by matching input and output cluster identifiers, unique within the context of a given profile and associated to an incoming or outgoing data flow in a device. Binding tables contain source and destination pairs.

Depending on the available information, device discovery may follow different methods. When the network address is known, the IEEE address can be requested using unicast communication. When it is not, petitions are broadcast (the IEEE address being part of the response payload). End devices will simply respond with the requested address while a network coordinator or a router will also send the addresses of all the devices associated with it.

This extended discovery protocol permits external devices to find out about devices in a network and the services that they offer, which endpoints can report when queried by the discovering device (which has previously obtained their addresses). Matching services can also be used.

The use of cluster identifiers enforces the binding of complementary entities using the binding tables, which are maintained by ZigBee coordinators, as the table must always be available within a network and coordinators are most likely to have a permanent power supply. Backups, managed by higher-level layers, may be needed by some applications. Binding requires an established communication link; after it exists, whether to add a new node to the network is decided, according to the application and security policies.

Communication can happen right after the association. Direct addressing uses both radio address and endpoint identifier, whereas indirect addressing uses every relevant field (address, endpoint, cluster, and attribute) and requires that they are sent to the network coordinator, which maintains associations and translates requests for communication. Indirect addressing is particularly useful to keep some devices very simple and minimize their need for storage. Besides these two methods, broadcast to all endpoints in a device is available, and group addressing is used to communicate with groups of endpoints belonging to a set of devices.

Security services

As one of its defining features, ZigBee provides facilities for carrying out secure communications, protecting establishment and transport of cryptographic keys, cyphering frames, and controlling devices. It builds on the basic security framework defined in IEEE 802.15.4. This part of the architecture relies on the correct management of symmetric keys and the correct implementation of methods and security policies.

Basic security model

The basic mechanism to ensure confidentiality is the adequate protection of all keying material. Trust must be assumed in the initial installation of the keys, as well as in the processing of security information. For an implementation to globally work, its general conformance to specified behaviors is assumed.

Keys are the cornerstone of the security architecture; as such their protection is of paramount importance, and keys are never supposed to be transported through an insecure channel. A momentary exception to this rule occurs during the initial phase of the addition to the network of a previously unconfigured device. The ZigBee network model must take particular care of security considerations, as ad hoc networks may be physically accessible to external devices. Also the state of the working environment cannot be predicted.

Within the protocol stack, different network layers are not cryptographically separated, so access policies are needed, and conventional design assumed. The open trust model within a device allows for key sharing, which notably decreases potential cost. Nevertheless, the layer which creates a frame is responsible for its security. If malicious devices may exist, every network layer payload must be ciphered, so unauthorized traffic can be immediately cut off. The exception, again, is the transmission of the network key, which confers a unified security layer to the grid, to a new connecting device.

Security architecture

ZigBee uses 128-bit keys to implement its security mechanisms. A key can be associated either to a network, being usable by both ZigBee layers and the MAC sublayer, or to a link, acquired through pre-installation, agreement or transport. Establishment of link keys is based on a master key which controls link key correspondence. Ultimately, at least, the initial master key must be obtained through a secure medium (transport or pre-installation), as the security of the whole network depends on it. Link and master keys are only visible to the application layer. Different services use different one-way variations of the link key to avoid leaks and security risks.

Key distribution is one of the most important security functions of the network. A secure network will designate one special device which other devices trust for the distribution of security keys: the trust center. Ideally, devices will have the center trust address and initial master key preloaded; if a momentary vulnerability is allowed, it will be sent as described above. Typical applications without special security needs will use a network key provided by the trust center (through the initially insecure channel) to communicate.

Thus, the trust center maintains both the network key and provides point-to-point security. Devices will only accept communications originating from a key supplied by the trust center, except for the initial master key. The security architecture is distributed among the network layers as follows:

The security levels infrastructure is based on CCM*, which adds encryption- and integrity-only features to CCM.

According to a German computer magazine website, Zigbee Home Automation 1.2 is using fallback keys for encryption negotiation which are known and cannot be changed. This makes the encryption highly vulnerable.[38]

Simulation of ZigBee networks

Network simulators, like NS2, OPNET, and NetSim can be used to simulate IEEE 802.15.4 ZigBee networks.

These simulators come with open source C or C++ libraries for users to modify. This way users can determine the validity of new algorithms before hardware implementation.

See also

References

  1. "Zigbee: Brief Introduction". Noor Ul Mushtaq. Retrieved 2016-11-05.
  2. 1 2 "ZigBee Specification FAQ". Zigbee Alliance. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  3. "ZigBee Wireless Networking", Drew Gislason (via EETimes)
  4. Zhang, D., Kotobi, K., Sodagari, S. and Bilén, S.. "A software system for enabling real-time voice communication over existing ZigBee networks.". Retrieved 2014-05-08.
  5. ZigBee Document 053474r06, Version 1.0, ZigBee Specification. ZigBee Alliance. 2004.
  6. "IEEE 802.15.4". Ieee 802. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  7. User manual (PDF), NXP.
  8. Archived December 13, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.
  9. "What's so good about ZigBee networks?" (PDF). Daintree Networks. Retrieved 2007-01-19.
  10. Kai Kreuzer et al. "Developing Applications for Your Smart Home with QIVICON." Archived March 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. osgi.org. Retrieved 2014-05-08.
  11. Bellido-Outeirino, Francisco J. (February 2012). "Building lighting automation through the integration of DALI with wireless sensor networks". IEEE Transactions on Consumer Electronics. 58 (1): 47–52. doi:10.1109/TCE.2012.6170054.
  12. "The ZigBee Alliance". Zigbee. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  13. "Wireless Sensor Networks Research Group". Sensor networks. 2008-11-17. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  14. "ZigBee Cluster Library Specification Download Request". Zigbee. Retrieved 2010-04-10.
  15. "Innovation", FAQ for BEN WPAN, Qi hardware, ZigBee is only royalty-free if not used for commercial purposes...
  16. "Zigbee, Linux, and the GPL". Freak labs. Retrieved 2009-06-14.
  17. "ZigBee Smart Energy Overview". ZigBee.org. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  18. "ZigBee IP and 920IP". ZigBee Alliance. Retrieved 2016-06-04.
  19. "ZigBee IP: Smart Grid, Meet the Internet of Things". GreenTech Advocates. Retrieved 2016-06-04.
  20. "Introducing ZigBee RF4CE" (PDF). Daintree Networks. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
  21. "ZigBee RF4CE: A Quiet Revolution is Underway (December, 2012)" (PDF). ZigBee Alliance. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
  22. "ZigBee RF4CE Webinar: A Quiet Revolution is Underway (December, 2012)". ZigBee Alliance. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
  23. "Zigbit Modules MCU Wireless- Atmel Corporation". Atmel.com. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  24. "n-Core Platform & Polaris Real-Time Locating System – Wireless Sensor Networks – ZigBee". N-core.info. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  25. David Egan, "ZigBee Propagation for Smart Metering Networks", Electric Light & Power vol 17 issue12
  26. "Microchip MRF24J40".
  27. "TI CC2350".
  28. "SLAB EM358x" (PDF).
  29. "SLAB EFR32MG" (PDF).
  30. "MRVL 88MZ100" (PDF).
  31. "Freescale MC1323XFS" (PDF).
  32. "NXP JN-516x" (PDF).
  33. "Atmel ATZB-24-B0" (PDF).
  34. "Telink TLSR8636".
  35. "GreenPeak GP691" (PDF).
  36. "Wireless Sensor Networks Research Group". Sensor-networks.org. 2010-04-15. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  37. "Wireless Sensor Networks Research Group". Sensor-networks.org. 2009-02-05. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  38. Security, heise. "Deepsec: ZigBee macht Smart Home zum offenen Haus".

External links

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