Overview
Direct Answer
Zigbee is a low-power wireless communication standard operating on the 2.4 GHz frequency band, designed for short-range mesh networking in Internet of Things deployments. It enables battery-powered devices to communicate with minimal energy consumption whilst maintaining reliable, self-healing network topologies.
How It Works
Zigbee implements a mesh network architecture where devices relay messages through intermediate nodes, extending range beyond direct point-to-point communication. The protocol uses the IEEE 802.15.4 physical and MAC layers, with Zigbee Alliance (now Connectivity Standards Organisation) defining application-level specifications that ensure interoperability across vendor implementations. Data rates typically range from 20 to 250 kbps depending on configuration.
Why It Matters
Organisations adopt Zigbee for building automation, smart metering, and industrial monitoring because its mesh topology eliminates single points of failure whilst battery life can extend months or years. The protocol's standardisation across vendors reduces lock-in risk and lowers integration costs compared to proprietary solutions.
Common Applications
Common deployments include home automation systems, wireless lighting controls, HVAC monitoring, occupancy sensing, and utility smart metering infrastructure. Healthcare facilities employ it for asset tracking and patient monitoring systems.
Key Considerations
Zigbee operates in a congested frequency band shared with WiFi and Bluetooth, potentially causing interference in dense deployments. Range typically maxes at 100 metres in open space, requiring careful mesh topology planning in large facilities.
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