The Role of BLE in Wearable Technology

Developex
4 min readMar 3, 2021

The IoT segment, and wearable devices as an important part of it, now urgently needs to unify protocols and standards for communications. Today there are 10+ solutions that claim to be good solutions for the Internet of Things space. But Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) is the most likely to remain as the de-facto standard for data transfer for wearable devices that aim to be energy efficient.
Wearable represents a large portion of the IoT sector. And even if IoT devices can use various protocols, wearable devices use BLE almost every time. BLE has already been used in smartphones and almost all wearables that pair with smartphones to provide people with the capability to use their phones to interact with their wearable devices.

What is wearable?

Wearable devices are smart electronic devices that can be worn on (or even in) the body as an implant, or accessories and can be paired with another device. Examples of wearables are devices such as smartwatches, wristbands, eyewear, head-mounted displays, smart clothing, smart jewelry, implantables, and many other devices.

It is interesting to look at how the future of wearable devices is changing. A couple of years ago the most popular devices were wristbands and watches. But now the most active sector in wearables is eyewear (+201.2% in 2020 compared to 2015), smart clothing (+62.6%) and there is still growth in the smartwatches market (+27.8%). Also, there are several potentially strong directions for products like electronic skin for use in medical applications, wearable beacons, and wearable jewelry.

Wearable Devices Specifics

To make devices that are wearable, certain requirements must be met. Such devices should:

  1. Pair with other IoT devices;
  2. Work well in a mesh network.
  3. Function a long time without charging.
  4. Be low-cost.
  5. Be small.
  6. Have a significant level of security.

If you take a look at the list above it is obvious that BLE meets almost all these requirements.

  • BLE (or Smart Ready) host is already available on smartphones.
  • Developed with ultra-low power consumption in mind.
  • BLE chips are small, the battery is small too. This reduces the cost, size, and weight of the product.
  • BLE 4.2 specification provides improved security requirements.
  • BLE Mesh is developed.

Wearables Energy Consumption

The low power consumption of BLE makes it ideal for wearable devices. It reduces battery size, which in turn reduces device cost, size, and weight.
BLE’s low data rate makes for an ideal fit for applications where only state information has to be exchanged.

The protocol is optimized to burst transmit small blocks of data at regular intervals, thus enabling the host processor to maximize the amount of time. In this way, each layer of the architecture has been optimized to reduce power consumption.

Power consumption for BLE ranges between 0.01 and 0.5 relative values if you take 1 as the mean value of Bluetooth Classic power consumption. This means a device with BLE would only need to be charged every tenth day rather than everyday if you had implemented the device using Classical Bluetooth.

However, the communication protocol is only one aspect of wearable devices. Wearable devices may include many other functional blocks like sensors, an analog front-end to process sensor signals, digital signal processing (DSP) to filter out any noise picked up from the environment, storage in which to log information, a processor to implement high-level system-related functionalities, a battery charger, and other subsystems.

Wearables Chip/Module Size

Another benefit of BLE in the case of the wearable is the size of a module.

3.5 mm x 3.5 mm x 1.0 mm is started to be OK for BLE Bluetooth modules. You can see the benefit when you compare it with the 11 mm x 13 mm x 2 mm that is the normal form factor for Bluetooth Classic. The BLE chips/modules are small and fit nicely into any wearable such as wristbands, watches, clothing, smart jewelry.

Cost

The final price for BLE chips and modules isn’t that much different than Bluetooth Classic chips and modules. But the final cost of the device where a BLE chip is used could end up being lower using BLE. The BLE chip is smaller, so the size of the final device would be smaller, and cheaper to boot. BLE devices can be used with a smaller, more compact circuit board which can also reduce expenses. Devices with BLE can be programmed faster thereby saving development time and costs.

The increasing adoption of Bluetooth Smart Ready in devices like smartphones, tablets, and other portable devices has led to Bluetooth Low Energy becoming a popular choice for the communication protocol in wearable products. To support the power requirements of these applications, various silicon vendors have developed BLE controllers and System on Chip (SoC) devices that support BLE. SoCs with BLE helps to reduce system power consumption, Bill of Materials (BOM) costs and the size of the final products to make the wearables market even more promising and attractive.

Hope you enjoyed reading this article. We will highly appreciate any comments regarding it.

Developex has solid expertise with BLE technology! And such projects as applications for the Healthcare industry seem to us more than just important! Developex can build a dedicated development team of Software and Firmware engineers, QA specialists, UI/UX designers, and also allocate a Project Manager/Business Analyst/Delivery Manager for your specific case and needs!

If you struggle to find a perfect match for your development team — don’t hesitate to contact us: contact@developex.com

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Developex

Developex — team of software professionals, with 20 years old history and large variety of software development and product development experience.