Standard

IEEE 1906.1-2015

Current

Existing or new amendments and versions must be purchased separately.

Language
Services

Abstract

New IEEE Standard - Active. A definition, terminology, conceptual model, and standard metrics for ad hoc network communication at the nanoscale are provided. Human-engineered networking is extended by the physical properties of nanoscale communication in ways beyond that defined in existing communication standards. These include in vivo, sub-cellular medical communication, smart materials and sensing at the molecular level, and the ability to operate in environments that would be too harsh for macroscale communication mechanisms to operate. Collaboration among a highly diverse set of disciplines with differing definitions and connotations for some terms is required by nanoscale communication, thus a common terminology is necessary in order to aid inter-discipline collaboration. A common framework for thinking abstractly about nanoscale communication can aid in defining and relating research and development effort. Components of the framework are independent enough to allow them to be developed in relative isolation, yet the components are also interoperable. To illustrate the recommended practice, example mappings between specific nanoscale communication use-cases and the common framework are included. Simulation code implementing the common framework for both wireless and molecular nanoscale communication is an embodiment of the common framework demonstrating precisely how the framework is applied.

Products specifications

  • Standard from IEEE
  • Published:
  • Document type: IS
  • Pages
  • Publisher: IEEE
  • Distributor: IEEE
  • ICS: 01.040.01
  • ICS: 03.100.40
  • ICS: 07.030
  • National Committee: IEEE Communications Society / Edge, Fog, Cloud Communications with IOT and Big Data Standards Committee

Product Relations

  • Referred by: IEEE 1906.1.1-2020
  • Refers: ISO/TS 27687:2008 Nanotechnologies--Terminology and definitions for nano-objects--Nanoparticle, nanofibre and nanoplate; definition 2.1.