Abstract

Owing to great potential in smart home and human-computer interactive applications, WiFi indoor localization has attracted extensive attentions in the past several years. The state-of-the-art systems have successfully achieved decimeter-level accuracies. However, the high accuracy is acquired at the cost of dense access point (AP) deployment, employing large size of frequency bandwidths or special-purpose radar signals which are not compatible with existing WiFi protocol, limiting their practical deployments. This paper presents the design and implementation of AWL, an accurate indoor localization system that enables a single WiFi AP to achieve decimeter-level accuracy with only one channel hopping. The key enabler of the system is we novelly employ channel hopping to create virtual antennas, without the need of adding more antennas or physically move the antennas' positions for a larger antenna array. We successfully utilize the widely known bad spatial aliasing to improve the AoA estimation accuracy. A novel multipath suppression scheme is also proposed to combat the severe multipath issue indoors. We build a prototype of AWL on WARP software-defined radio platform. Comprehensive experiments manifest that AWL achieves a median localization accuracy of 38 cm in a rich multipath indoor environment with only a single AP equipped with 6 antennas. In a small scale area, AWL is able to accurately track a moving device's trajectory, enabling applications such as writing/drawing in the air.

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