YOU ARE AT:ChipsetsMorse Micro confirms Wi-Fi certification of HaLow chips, modules, reference designs

Morse Micro confirms Wi-Fi certification of HaLow chips, modules, reference designs

Semiconductor company Morse Micro, developing Wi-Fi HaLow for low-power mid-range IoT connectivity, has confirmed its various chipsets, modules, and reference designs have been certified by the Wi-Fi Alliance as part of its new Wi-Fi HaLow accreditation scheme. Its new Wi-Fi HaLow reference design is among the first to be certified by the alliance, and the first reference design of any sort for operation in 8MHz bandwidth, it said.

Wi-Fi HaLow (802.11ah) uses sub-GHz spectrum frequencies in global ISM bands, between 850 MHz and 950 MHz. These offer advantages over the unlicensed 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands, where Wi-Fi traditionally plays, insofar as the spectrum is less congested and lower frequency, improving reliability, propagation, and coverage. As a consequence, the HaLow version makes Wi-Fi viable effectively for lower-power wider-area IoT cases.

It offers multi-vendor interoperability by using existing Wi-Fi protocols, making it compatible with other Wi-Fi Alliance certified products, and the same security and setup as existing Wi-Fi solutions. It straddles the line between low-power short-range technologies like Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) and Zigbee, and the traditional low-power wide-area networking (LPWAN) set, including LoRaWAN, NB-IoT, and Sigfox.

Australia-based Morse Micro is an official Wi-Fi HaLow testbed vendor, and assisted with driving availability of the 802.11 ah certification project in the Wi-Fi Alliance. It has been on a “fast path in the Wi-Fi HaLow certification effort”, it said. The Wi-Fi Alliance confirmed earlier this week it is now certifying HaLow-based ioT devices (as ‘Wi-Fi Certified HaLow’), in sundry sensors, wearables, cameras, meters, and other IoT applications.

Morse Micro, which has raised at least AUD$30 million from investors since it was founded in 2016, released system-on-chip (SoC) and module samples to select developers in the summer, with a view to raise interest in the Wi-Fi HaLow standard among the IoT developer community. The company claims a 10-times advance with its Wi-Fi HaLow chips in terms of range, compared with conventional Wi-Fi.

Its developing Wi-Fi HaLow portfolio includes the “smallest, fastest and lowest-power” IEEE 802.11ah compliant SoCs. The MM6104 SoC supports 1 MHz, 2 MHz, and 4 MHz channel bandwidth; the MM6108 SoC also supports 8 MHz bandwidth. Both provide a single-chip solution incorporating the radio, PHY, and MAC, supporting data rates from “tens of Mbps to hundreds of Kbps at the farthest range”.

A statement said: “Morse Micro’s Wi-Fi HaLow platform is poised to redefine low-power, long-reach Wi-Fi connectivity for IoT… Morse Micro’s low-power IC design, combined with the IEEE 802.11ah standard, enables extended sleep times and lower power consumption for battery-operated client devices, achieving longer battery life durations than other existing IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n/ac/ax generations.”

Michael De Nil, co-founder and chief executive at Morse Micro, said: “The potential of extending the already transformative characteristics of Wi-Fi into the sub-1 GHz band is hard to overstate, and we applaud Wi-Fi Alliance’s leadership in unleashing a new era of long-range, low-power and high-capacity Wi-Fi HaLow experiences for consumers.”

He added: “As the leading Wi-Fi HaLow innovator, we have invested heavily in R&D to ensure the market is ready with SoCs and modules that deliver unmatched benefits unlike any Wi-Fi or LPWAN technology available today. The addition of sub-1 GHz Wi-Fi HaLow will be a game changer for consumers and enterprises, from smart homes and smart cities to industrial markets and everything in between.”

Kevin Robinson, senior vice president of marketing at the Wi-Fi Alliance, said: “Companies like Morse Micro are helping to accelerate market acceptance of Wi-Fi HaLow as a standards-based solution for long-range, low-power IoT connectivity. Certified HaLow devices and products augment Wi-Fi’s portfolio by bringing Wi-Fi into the sub-GHz spectrum to enable a variety of IoT use cases in smart building, smart city, industrial and agricultural environments.”

ABOUT AUTHOR

James Blackman
James Blackman
James Blackman has been writing about the technology and telecoms sectors for over a decade. He has edited and contributed to a number of European news outlets and trade titles. He has also worked at telecoms company Huawei, leading media activity for its devices business in Western Europe. He is based in London.