6533b7d4fe1ef96bd1262008

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Performance of LoRa technology: link-level and cell-level performance

Giuseppe SantaromitaMichele GucciardoIlenia TinnirelloDaniele CroceStefano Mangione

subject

Settore ING-INF/03 - Telecomunicazionibusiness.industryComputer scienceNetwork packetLoRa IoTspreading factorinterferencecapacityperformanceChirp spread spectrumCellular levelModulationDefault gatewayLink levelFadingbusinessCommunication channelComputer network

description

Abstract LoRa is a chirp spread spectrum technology that is becoming very popular for low-power wide-area networks, with high-density devices. In this chapter, we study the capacity of LoRa in rejecting different interfering signals. First, we analyze LoRa modulation numerically demonstrating that channel captures appear easily and that collisions between packets modulated with different spreading factors (SFs) are not uncommon. We validate such findings in experiments based on commercial devices and software-defined radios. Second, we model the network capacity obtainable in a typical LoRa cell: we show that high SFs can be seriously influenced by inter-SF collisions and that fading has a negligible impact compared to collisions. Finally, we discuss capacity improvements that can be achieved by increasing the density of LoRa gateways. Our results demonstrate that inter-SF collisions are indeed an issue in LoRa networks and, thus, allocating higher SFs to users far from the gateway might not necessarily improve their link capacity, in the case of congested networks.

https://doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-12-818880-4.00010-7