Main Content

Bluetooth LE Positioning by Using Direction Finding

This example shows you how to calculate the 2-D or 3-D position of a Bluetooth® low energy (LE) node by implementing Bluetooth direction finding features and the triangulation-based location estimation technique by using Bluetooth® Toolbox™. The Bluetooth Core Specification 5.1 [2] introduced angle of arrival (AoA) and angle of departure (AoD) direction finding features to support centimeter-level accuracy in Bluetooth LE location finding.

Using this example, you can:

  • Simulate the direction finding packet exchange between the Bluetooth LE node and each locator to estimate the angles between them.

  • Estimate the location of Bluetooth LE node by using triangulation-based location estimation technique in an additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel.

  • Measure the positioning accuracy of the Bluetooth LE node related to the bit energy-to-noise density ratio (Eb/No).

Bluetooth LE Localization

Bluetooth technology provides different types of location based services [1]. On a high level, these services can be split into two categories.

  • Proximity Solutions: To estimate the distance between two devices, the Bluetooth proximity solutions previously used received signal strength indication (RSSI) measurements.

  • Positioning Systems: To estimate the position of device, the Bluetooth positioning systems use trilateration based on several RSSI measurements to estimate the position of the device.

Previous versions of Bluetooth provide only meter-level accuracy in estimating the device location. The Bluetooth Core Specification 5.1 [2] introduced new direction finding features that support centimeter-level accuracy in estimating the location of a device. For more information about direction finding services in Bluetooth LE, see Bluetooth Location and Direction Finding.

Direction Finding Methods

Bluetooth direction finding provides two distinct methods each of which exploits the same underlying basis. These direction finding methods are AoA and AoD. Each of these techniques require one of the two communicating devices to have an array of multiple antennas. In the AoA and AoD techniques, the antenna array is present at the receiver and transmitter, respectively.

Antenna Arrays

Use a uniform linear array (ULA) or uniform rectangular array (URA) to calculate the direction of a signal. Simple linear designs like ULAs enable you to calculate only azimuth angle from a signal. Two dimensional arrays like URAs enable you to calculate both the azimuth and elevation angles in the 3-D half space. For more information about antenna arrays, see Bluetooth Location and Direction Finding.

Calculating the elevation and azimuth angles of the signal relative to a reference plane is common in these antenna arrays. This figure shows the concept of azimuth and elevation angles.

  • Azimuth angle: This angle is the angle between the x-axis and the orthogonal projection of the vector onto the xy-plane. The angle is positive in going from the x-axis toward the y-axis.

  • Elevation angle: This angle is the angle between the vector and its orthogonal projection onto the xy-plane. The angle is positive when going toward the positive z-axis from the xy-plane.

Direction Finding Signals

The communication in Bluetooth LE is realized using one of these two distinct physical layers (PHYs).

  • LE Uncoded: This PHY is further segregated into the LE1M PHY and LE2M PHY. LE1M is the default PHY and provides a symbol rate of 1 Msym/s. LE2M provides a symbol rate of 2 Msym/s.

  • LE Coded: This PHY is equipped for long range communication and provides a symbol rate of 1 Msym/s. It has the potential to quadruple the range that can be achieved whilst reducing the data rate.

Bluetooth direction finding can use either the LE1M or LE2M PHY, but not the LECoded PHY.

The Bluetooth Core Specification 5.1 [2] specifies additional data in the protocol data unit (PDU) packet structure, known as the constant tone extension (CTE) for direction finding. This figure shows the CTE appended at the end of LE uncoded PHY packet.

Use the CTE in any of these communication types.

  • Connection-oriented communication: It specifies the CTE using the new LL_CTE_RSP PDUs that are sent over the connection in response to the LL_CTE_REQ PDUs.

  • Connectionless communication: It appends the CTE to the existing periodic advertising PDUs, AUX_SYNC_IND, for direction finding.

In connection-oriented and connectionless communication, the CTE is appended at the end of the PDU. For information about Bluetooth packet structures, see Bluetooth Packet Structure. For more information about the CTE, see volume 6, Part B, Section 2.5.1 of the Bluetooth Core Specification 5.1 [2].

AoA and AoD Based Bluetooth LE Positioning

This example uses these terms:

  • Bluetooth LE node - Specifies the device whose location is to be determined.

  • Locator - Specifies the receiving device (in the AoA calculation) and transmitting device (in the AoD calculation).

This figure shows how to estimate the position of a Bluetooth LE node using the AoA and AoD methods.

In the AoA method, the transmitter (Bluetooth LE node) transmits a direction finding signal using single antenna. The receiving device (locator), equipped with an antenna array, takes the IQ samples while switching between the antennas present in the array. The locator uses the IQ samples to calculate the AoA.

In the AoD method, the transmitting device (locator) is equipped with an antenna array. The transmitting device transmits the signals while switching between the antennas in the array. The receiving device, consisting of a single antenna, collects the IQ samples and calculates the AoD.

To estimate the position of a Bluetooth LE node in 2-D or 3-D, the device requires at least two locators in the network, respectively. Based on the estimated angles and the known Bluetooth LE locator positions, estimate the position of a Bluetooth LE node using the triangulation technique.

Simulation Parameters

Specify the dimension in which the Bluetooth LE node position needs to be determined and the number of Bluetooth LE locators. Specify at least two locators, to estimate the 2-D or 3-D position of a Bluetooth LE node.

numDimensions = 2;       % Dimension of Bluetooth LE devices position in a network
numLocators = 3;         % Number of locators

Specify the Eb/No range and the number of iterations to simulate each Eb/No point.

EbNo = 6:2:16;                % Eb/No in dB
numIterations = 200;       % Number of iterations to average the position error

Specify the direction finding method, the direction finding packet type, and the PHY transmission mode.

dfMethod = "AoA";            % Direction finding method
dfPacketType = "ConnectionCTE";        % Direction finding packet type
phyMode = "LE1M";             % PHY transmission mode, must be LE1M or LE2M (for ConnectionCTE) and LE1M (for ConnectionlessCTE)

Specify the antenna array parameters.

arraySize = 16;           % Antenna array size, must be a scalar (represents ULA) or a row vector (represents URA) for 2D or 3D positioning, respectively
elementSpacing = 0.5;      % Normalized spacing between the antenna elements with respect to wavelength
switchingPattern = 1:prod(arraySize);    % Antenna switching pattern, must be a 1xM row vector and M must be in the range [2, 74/slotDuration+1]

Specify the waveform generation parameters.

slotDuration = 2;        % Slot duration in microseconds
cteLength = 160;     % Length of CTE in microseconds, must be in the range [16, 160] with 8 microseconds step size
sps = 8;                 % Samples per symbol
channelIndex = 17;   % Channel index
crcInit = '555551';             % CRC initialization
accessAddress = '01234567';       % Access address
payloadLength = 1;       % Payload length in bytes

Direction Finding and Position Estimation Procedure

Follow these steps to estimate the Bluetooth LE node position.

  1. Position the Bluetooth LE node at the origin. Place the locators randomly in the 2-D or 3-D space.

  2. Model the direction finding packet exchange between the Bluetooth LE node and each locator to estimate the angles between them.

a. Generate a direction finding packet for connection or connectionless communication.

b. Generate Bluetooth LE waveform.

c. Perform waveform steering and antenna switching.

d. Add AWGN to the waveform.

e. Perform demodulation, decoding, and IQ sampling on the noisy waveform.

f. Estimate the angle(s) between the Bluetooth LE node and each locator using the IQ samples.

3. Estimate the Bluetooth LE node position by performing triangulation using the known locator positions and the estimated angles.

For each iteration, assign random positions to the locators over a range of Eb/No points, and then repeat the preceding steps.

If you install Parallel Computing Toolbox™ to increase the speed of simulation, use a parfor loop by commenting-out the for statement and uncommenting the parfor statement in this code. The parfor loop processes each Eb/No point in parallel to reduce the total simulation time. If Parallel Computing Toolbox™ is not installed, by default the example switches to the for statement.

Validate the simulation parameters.

minLocators = 2; % Minimum number of locators
if numDimensions == 2 && size(arraySize,2) ~= 1
    error('The arraySize must be a scalar for 2-D position estimation');
end
if numDimensions == 3 && size(arraySize,2) ~= 2
    error('The arraySize must be a 1-by-2 vector for 3-D position estimation');
end
if numLocators < minLocators
    error(['The numLocators must be greater than or equal to ' num2str(minLocators)]);
end
if strcmp(dfPacketType,'ConnectionCTE') && payloadLength ~= 1
    error('The payloadLength must be 1 byte for direction finding packet type of ConnectionCTE');
elseif strcmp(dfPacketType,'ConnectionlessCTE') && payloadLength < 3
    error('The payloadLength must be greater than or equal to 3 bytes for direction finding packet type of ConnectionlessCTE');
end

Create and configure Bluetooth LE angle estimation configuration object. Derive the type of CTE based on the slot duration and the direction finding method.

if numDimensions == 3 && isscalar(elementSpacing)
    elementSpacing = [elementSpacing elementSpacing]; % Element spacing must be a vector to perform 3D positioning
end
cfg = bleAngleEstimateConfig('ArraySize',arraySize,'SlotDuration',slotDuration,'SwitchingPattern', ...
                                    switchingPattern,'ElementSpacing',elementSpacing);
validateConfig(cfg);
if strcmp(dfMethod,'AoA')
    cteType = [0;0];
else
    cteType = [0;1];
    if slotDuration == 1
        cteType = [1;0];
    end
end

% Convert access address in hexadecimal to binary
accessAddBits = int2bit(hex2dec(accessAddress),32,false);

% Initialize the variables to be used outside the parfor loop
numEbNo = numel(EbNo);                                % Number of Eb/No points
posNode = zeros(numDimensions,numEbNo);
posLocator = zeros(numDimensions,numLocators,numEbNo);
angleEst = zeros(numLocators,numDimensions-1,numEbNo);
posNodeEst = zeros(numDimensions,numEbNo);
validResult = zeros(1,numEbNo);
avgPositionError = zeros(1,numEbNo);

Model the direction finding packet exchange between the Bluetooth LE node and each locator to estimate the angles between them.

% parfor iEbNo = 1:numEbNo % Use 'parfor' to speed up the simulation
for iEbNo = 1:numEbNo % Use 'for' to debug the simulation
    
    % Set the random substream index to ensure that each iteration uses a
    % repeatable set of random numbers
    stream = RandStream('combRecursive','Seed',12345);
    stream.Substream = iEbNo;
    RandStream.setGlobalStream(stream);
    
    % Loop over the number of iterations to average the positioning error.
    % If the successful links between the locators and node are less than
    % the minimum number of locators required to perform triangulation, then
    % the iteration fails.
    posErr = zeros(1,numIterations);
    iterationFailCount = 0;
    for iterCount = 1:numIterations
        
        % For each iteration, generate random positions for the locators
        [tempPosNode,tempPosLocator,ang] = helperBLEGeneratePositions(numLocators,numDimensions);
        posNode(:,iEbNo) = tempPosNode;
        posLocator(:,:,iEbNo) = tempPosLocator;

        % Loop over the number of locators
        tempAngleEst = zeros(numLocators,numDimensions-1);
        idx = [];
        linkFailFlag = zeros(numLocators,1);
        for i=1:numLocators
            
            % Generate direction finding packet
            data = helperBLEGenerateDFPDU(dfPacketType,cteLength,cteType,payloadLength,crcInit);
            
            % Generate Bluetooth LE waveform
            bleWaveform = bleWaveformGenerator(data,'Mode',phyMode,'SamplesPerSymbol',sps,...
                'ChannelIndex',channelIndex,'DFPacketType',dfPacketType,'AccessAddress',accessAddBits);
            
            % Perform steering and switching between the antennas
            dfWaveform = helperBLESteerSwitchAntenna(bleWaveform,ang(i,:),...
                                        phyMode,sps,dfPacketType,payloadLength,cfg);

            % Pass the waveform through AWGN channel
            snr = EbNo(iEbNo) - 10*log10(sps); % Signal to noise ratio (SNR)
            noiseWaveform = awgn(dfWaveform,snr,'measured');

            % Pass the noisy waveform to bleIdealReceiver which returns
            % the IQ samples
            [~, ~, iqSamples] = bleIdealReceiver(noiseWaveform,'Mode',phyMode,...
                'SamplesPerSymbol',sps,'ChannelIndex',channelIndex,'DFPacketType',...
                dfPacketType,'SlotDuration',slotDuration);
            
            % Estimate the angle(s) using the IQ samples. A packet is
            % detected successfully when the minimum number of non-zero IQ
            % samples are present.
            refSampleLength = 8; % Reference samples length
            % IQ samples must contain at least eight samples from reference period and
            % one sample from each antenna
            minIQSamples = refSampleLength+getNumElements(cfg)-1;
            if length(nonzeros(iqSamples)) >= minIQSamples % If packet detection is successful
                tempAngleEst(i,:) = bleAngleEstimate(iqSamples,cfg);
            else
                linkFailFlag(i) = 1; % If packet detection fails, enable the link fail flag
                idx = [idx i]; %#ok<AGROW> % Store the indices corresponding to the locator-node communication fail links
            end
        end
        
        % If the successful node-locator links are greater than the minimum
        % number of locators and all the locator angles are not same, then
        % estimate the node position using triangulation and compute the
        % position error
        if (numLocators-nnz(linkFailFlag)) >= minLocators && ~isequal(tempAngleEst(:,1),repmat(tempAngleEst(1,1),numLocators,1))
            % If any link fails, then assign NaN to the corresponding angle
            % estimates
            posLocatorEbNo = posLocator(:,:,iEbNo);
            tempAngEstTri = tempAngleEst;
            if any(linkFailFlag == 1)
                posLocatorEbNo(:,idx) = [];
                tempAngleEst(idx,:) = NaN(numel(idx),numDimensions-1);
                tempAngEstTri(idx,:) = [];
            end
            
            % Estimate the node position using triangulation
            posNodeEst(:,iEbNo) = blePositionEstimate(posLocatorEbNo,'angulation',tempAngEstTri.');
            angleEst(:,:,iEbNo) = tempAngleEst;
            
            % Compute the position error
            posErr(iterCount) = sqrt(sum((posNodeEst(:,iEbNo)-posNode(:,iEbNo)).^2));
        else
            iterationFailCount = iterationFailCount + 1; % Count the number of failed links used to average the position error
        end
    end
    
    if(iterationFailCount == numIterations) % If all the links fail at a given Eb/No value
        disp(['At Eb/No = ',num2str(EbNo(iEbNo)),' dB, all direction finding packet transmissions failed'])
        validResult(iEbNo) = 0; % Disable plot flag for failed links
    else
        avgPositionError(iEbNo) = sum(posErr)/(numIterations-iterationFailCount);
        disp(['At Eb/No = ',num2str(EbNo(iEbNo)),' dB, positioning error in meters = ', num2str(avgPositionError(iEbNo))]) 
        validResult(iEbNo) = 1; % Enable plot flag for successful links
    end
end
At Eb/No = 6 dB, positioning error in meters = 0.53245
At Eb/No = 8 dB, positioning error in meters = 0.43124
At Eb/No = 10 dB, positioning error in meters = 0.34898
At Eb/No = 12 dB, positioning error in meters = 0.29138
At Eb/No = 14 dB, positioning error in meters = 0.19729
At Eb/No = 16 dB, positioning error in meters = 0.18599

Simulation Results

If the direction finding packet transmission is successful, the example displays these plots.

  • Bluetooth LE node position, locators positions, and the estimated node positions in 2-D or 3-D. The plot also shows the triangulation lines for the maximum Eb/No value and the last iteration.

  • Average position error (in meters) versus Eb/No (in dB).

[~,validIdx] = find(validResult==1);
if ~isempty(validIdx)
    EbNoValid = EbNo(validIdx);
    [~,EbNoIdx] = max(EbNoValid);
    EbNoValidIdx = validIdx(EbNoIdx);
    helperBLEVisualizePosition(posLocator(:,:,EbNoValidIdx),posNode(:,EbNoValidIdx),...
                        angleEst(:,:,EbNoValidIdx),posNodeEst(:,EbNoValidIdx));
    figure
    plot(EbNoValid,avgPositionError(validIdx),'-b*','LineWidth',2, ...
            'MarkerEdgeColor','b','MarkerSize',10)
    grid on
    xlabel('Eb/No (dB)')
    ylabel('Estimated Position Error (meters)')
    title('Position Accuracy in Bluetooth LE network')
end

Figure contains an axes object. The axes object with title Bluetooth LE Positioning Using Direction Finding, xlabel X (meters), ylabel Y (meters) contains 15 objects of type line, text. One or more of the lines displays its values using only markers These objects represent Locator position, Node position, Estimated node position.

Figure contains an axes object. The axes object with title Position Accuracy in Bluetooth LE network, xlabel Eb/No (dB), ylabel Estimated Position Error (meters) contains an object of type line.

This example enables you to estimate the 2-D or 3-D position of a Bluetooth LE node by using the Bluetooth LE direction finding functionality. The example shows how to implement the triangulation method to calculate the angles between the locators and the Bluetooth LE node. The example also shows how to measure the positioning accuracy related to the Eb/No value by computing the distance between the estimated and actual node positions in an AWGN channel.

Appendix

The example uses these helpers:

Selected Bibliography

  1. Bluetooth Technology Website. “Bluetooth Technology Website | The Official Website of Bluetooth Technology.” Accessed November 22, 2021. https://www.bluetooth.com

  2. Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG). "Core System Package [Low Energy Controller Volume]". Bluetooth Core Specification. Version 5.1, Volume https://www.bluetooth.com

  3. Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG). "Core System Package [Low Energy Controller Volume]". Bluetooth Core Specification. Version 5.3, Volume https://www.bluetooth.com

See Also

Functions

Objects

Related Topics