Dreamstime
Wi Fi Abstract Promo

Partnership to Design and Manufacture New Wi-Fi HaLow Modules

Jan. 31, 2023
Morse Micro will team up with AzureWave Technologies to develop Wi-Fi HaLow modules—low-power Wi-Fi for IoT devices.

Check out more of our CES 2023 coverage.

What you’ll learn:

  • What is HaLow?
  • How this partnership will help nudge IoT forward.
  • General specs of the HaLow chip.

At CES 2023, Morse Micro announced a partnership with AzureWave Technologies to design and develop two Wi-Fi HaLow modules, including the smallest type, a 13- × 13-mm module. Both FCC-certified module designs feature Morse Micro’s MM6108 microchip, a fast, low-power Wi-Fi HaLow system-on-chip (SoC) that offers 10X more range than traditional Wi-Fi solutions (Fig. 1)

 “Wi-Fi HaLow continues to gain momentum in the IoT ecosystem, and our collaboration with AzureWave builds on this energy as we scale and accelerate the deployment of Wi-Fi HaLow solutions worldwide,” says Morse Micro co-founder and chief executive officer Michael De Nil. “By joining forces, Morse Micro and AzureWave are poised to design and deliver best-in-class Wi-Fi HaLow solutions that will enrich existing communication modules in a broad range of IoT and consumer electronics applications.” 

Since Wi-Fi HaLow is geared toward IoT devices and taps into the lower-frequency ranges, it requires Wi-Fi HaLow-enabled access points or hubs for compatibility (Fig. 2). The company is working with leading worldwide ISPs to incorporate Wi-Fi HaLow into next-gen home gateways and developing solutions that allow existing customers to introduce Wi-Fi HaLow as soon as possible.

It also comes with scalability, robustness, and security essential for the toughest connected environments. Overall, one Wi-Fi HaLow-enabled access point supports over 8,000 IoT devices, which means it provides connectivity for large ecosystems in the industrial, agriculture, smart-building, and smart-city sectors. Wi-Fi HaLow extends to areas that are deemed unreachable by 2.4-GHz wireless technology and at much faster speeds than other sub-gigahertz IoT protocols.

“As a leading wireless module maker, AzureWave provides design and manufacturing services that ultimately shorten the customer’s development process and time-to-market, enabling the end-products to be more compact, value-added, and extremely low power,” said Gary Cheng, president and chief executive officer at AzureWave Technologies Inc. “Our partnership with Morse Micro demonstrates the continued global demand for Wi-Fi HaLow solutions, and it provides the opportunity to rapidly scale Wi-Fi HaLow for countless IoT devices.”

Morse Micro also is working with Matter to develop secure IoT ecosystems through the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA) to make Wi-Fi HaLow compatible with that communications protocol. However, the company is focusing less on Zigbee and Thread due to their low-speed, short-range IoT applications. 

Anyone can purchase the 13- × 13-mm and 14- × 18.5-mm modules through AzureWave. In addition, Morse Micro is working on evaluation platforms to integrate these modules for customers. Later this year, Wi-Fi HaLow is expected to be available for the maker and hobbyist communities.

Check out more of our CES 2023 coverage.

Sponsored Recommendations

What are the Important Considerations when Assessing Cobot Safety?

April 16, 2024
A review of the requirements of ISO/TS 15066 and how they fit in with ISO 10218-1 and 10218-2 a consideration the complexities of collaboration.

Wire & Cable Cutting Digi-Spool® Service

April 16, 2024
Explore DigiKey’s Digi-Spool® professional cutting service for efficient and precise wire and cable management. Custom-cut to your exact specifications for a variety of cable ...

DigiKey Factory Tomorrow Season 3: Sustainable Manufacturing

April 16, 2024
Industry 4.0 is helping manufacturers develop and integrate technologies such as AI, edge computing and connectivity for the factories of tomorrow. Learn more at DigiKey today...

Connectivity – The Backbone of Sustainable Automation

April 16, 2024
Advanced interfaces for signals, data, and electrical power are essential. They help save resources and costs when networking production equipment.

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!