The scope of the Internet of Things (IoT) is vast, covering numerous consumer and enterprise market sectors. For a closer look at how MIPI Alliance specifications support growth in IoT, we're taking a look at a different IoT market sector each month. In this third post in the series, we’ll examine the use of MIPI specifications in the enterprise drone market.
In 2021, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency and US Federal Aviation Administration issued new regulations, clarifying the legal landscape for drone usage and setting the goal of integrating drones into existing airspace while maintaining the necessary safety levels. With the release of these rules and similar rules in other countries, the global enterprise drone market is expected to grow at a significant rate over the next decade.
Analyst reports indicate that the use of drones in the enterprise market will generate most of the value in the broader drone market—enterprise drones being defined as “unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) sold directly to a business for use in its operations.” Based on this definition, analysts predict the total global shipment of enterprise drones will reach 2.4 million units in 2023—a 66.8% compound annual growth rate (CAGR)—with the main source of growth occurring in five main enterprise market segments:
The use of high-resolution machine vision is essential for many enterprise use cases, such as using drones to perform the remote inspection of power lines and telecommunications towers, monitor crops and livestock, perform industrial site inspections and enable law enforcement reconnaissance.
Machine vision also provides a much more fundamental enabler to unlock the highest value use cases in the enterprise drone market: the ability to operate drones beyond the visual line of sight (BVLOS)—i.e., for drones to navigate themselves autonomously, well beyond the visual range of the drone operator, connected via wide-area cellular and satellite.
Drone experts have highlighted the development of detect, sense and avoid (DSA) systems as being critical technology enablers for BVLOS drone operation to ensure the drones can maintain compliance with regulations. These systems reduce the risk of a mid-air collision by ensuring the drones are able to operate safely in a variety of environments and avoid obstacles, including other aircraft.
A key component of these solutions will be the integration of high-resolution cameras, lidar and radars. The data from these sensors will be fused, using cellular connectivity, with data from other UAVs or ground-based systems so that the drone has a good understanding of its environment and is able to safely maneuver within it.
The key challenges when developing drones with advanced machine vision and DSA capabilities are designing and integrating sensors and their associated compute components within necessary performance, size, weight and power constraints. Use of MIPI specifications within these components can help overcome these challenges.
MIPI Alliance develops and maintains interface and protocol specifications to connect key embedded electronic components (cameras, displays, sensors and communications modules) within electronic devices. The specifications support design goals of high-bandwidth performance, low power consumption and low EMI. Described in more detail below, the following attributes allow MIPI specifications to enable enterprise drones that require machine vision and solve key technology challenges involved with the implementation of DSA solutions:
The following MIPI interface and protocol specifications are most relevant to the enterprise drone market:
For more information on how MIPI specifications are enabling enterprise drones and to see examples of other IoT use cases, download the recently published white paper; “MIPI Alliance: Enabling the IoT Opportunity.”
You can also access the MIPI DevCon 2020 IoT presentation and closing chat session to hear from industry experts about the growth of IoT, market trends and the role of MIPI specifications in supporting connected devices.