US Patent and Trademark
Office Grants OQ Technology its First Satellite IoT
Patent
16 February 2022
OQ Technology has been granted
a patent for its IoT (internet of things) ‘wake-up’
technology by the US Patent and Trademark Office. It
is the first out of the company’s six patent
applications in the US and the EU.
‘Wake-up’ is a smart
power-saving technology within OQ’s terminal IoT
devices that allows them to efficiently wake up and
communicate with the base station (satellite) only
when needed. The function can be adjusted in line
with the growth of the number of satellites, with
each satellite being able to connect with thousands
of sensors. Through ‘wake-up’ OQ aims to achieve the
10-year battery-life goal set by 3GPP standards for
narrowband IoT (NB-IoT) wireless communications.
OQ’s other patent applications
include frequency synchronisation, timing
synchronisation, IoT device localisation,
inter-satellite link technology, and a satellite
system design and network architecture for cellular
IoT communication between satellites and ground
stations. The ‘wake-up’ technology and the
technologies still pending patents are all to be
implemented onboard OQ’s satellite constellation in
low Earth orbit (LEO).
Omar Qaise, founder and CEO of
OQ Technology said: “I’m very grateful to US Patent
and Trademark Office to grant OQ Technology this
patent. This and the pending patents will give us an
edge over competitors and security to our
intellectual property. In addition to the patent for
‘wake-up’, we have five more patents in the queue to
be approved both in USA and Europe which we expect
to take place this year. With these patents and our
frequency licenses and chip partnerships we are the
pioneer company who is well positioned to provide
3GPP compatible satellite NB-IoT over
non-terrestrial networks.
“OQ Technology is the only
company in the world that uses standardised 3GPP
cellular technology for NB-IoT to connect devices to
satellites. We have been leading the way for
satellite-based 5G communications since we created
the world’s first universal plug and play IoT device
that can provide connectivity using LEO satellite
infrastructure. Testing is orbit using our Tiger-1
mission in 2019 was another. This is yet another
important milestone for us.”
The remaining five technologies
pending patents are: - “Terminal device
localisation”, which allows to locate a terminal
device, using stored data from the base station(s)
instead of an expensive global positioning system. -
“Inter-satellite links”, keeping the different base
stations aware of each other and also record keeping
of terminal devices being connectable to the
different base stations. This will make hand-over
between base stations easier. In the future this
will also include GEO satellites. - “Frequency
synchronisation” and “Timing synchronisation” – they
synchronise communication and thus improve the
signalling between terminal devices and base
stations to overcome Doppler effect (wavelength
change from travelling objects) issues and timing
misalignment issues. This improves the quality of
data transmissions and data rate capacity, and also
saves energy. - A satellite system design and
network architecture for cellular IoT communication
between space and earth stations.
The company has also developed
a technology that allows it to use the cheaper
standard mobile chips ($5) for its satellite
connectivity, instead of the expensive satellite
chip ($100) that would have to be installed and used
when leaving terrestrial networks.
OQ’s services are ideal for
applications requiring fast and real-time data
processing via satellite, including asset tracking,
drone control, vehicle telematics, artificial
intelligence critical alarms, automated transport
and smart cars, where the latency has to be below 10
milliseconds, which satellites in GEO
(geosynchronous equatorial orbit) by incumbent
operators, with a latency of up to 250 ms, cannot
provide.
Last year, OQ launched its
first commercial nanosatellite “Tiger-2” and used it
to successfully test its hybrid satellite-cellular
user terminal in harsh desert conditions. Tiger-3 is
on schedule for launch with mission integrator
NanoAvionics. OQ plans to further grow its
constellation with more satellites soon.
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