Along with joining the mioty Alliance, which maintains the specifications and promotes the technology, ST has also announced availability of a protocol stack from the ST Authorized Partner Stackforce that allows customers to create mioty devices using the STM32WL wireless System-on-Chip (SoC).
“mioty makes exciting new Massive IoT applications possible, for instance, to cover a large geographical area,” said Hakim Jaafar, STM32 Wireless Marketing Director, STMicroelectronics. “The mioty stack further strengthens the ecosystem around our STM32WL SoC, which supports various common sub-GHz LPWAN technologies such as LoRaWAN, Sigfox, and wM-Bus, and delivers a unique level of integration that saves space, power, and time to market."
mioty sends messages using an advanced telegram-splitting technique, which is recognised and standardised by the European Telecommunication Standards Institute (ETSI) which ensures extremely short radio transmissions that allow extended operation without the logistical challenges of replacing batteries in massive IoT networks. Short transmissions also minimise interference with nearby signals and allow many thousands of mioty nodes to coexist on the same network.
mioty data packets can travel several kilometres in built-up areas and more than 15km with line of sight, allowing just a few base stations to cover large industrial sites or outdoor areas such as oilfields. In addition, mioty devices can communicate while moving at up to 120km/h without signal-fading issues, serving applications such as fleet management, asset tracking, and theft detection.
The mioty protocol stack for the STM32WL has been developed by Stackforce, a founding member of the mioty Alliance and ST Authorized Partner. The stack is available as a library for direct application integration or firmware, ready to be flashed directly onto the SoC for modem-like use.
The STM32WL is included in ST’s 10-year longevity program, which guarantees long-term availability to support developers of industrial products.