NXP's IW612 Offers Simultaneous Secure Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2, and Matter Networking for the IoT

Designed for routers, gateways, and hubs, the IW612 talks three networks — and can bridge Thread and Wi-Fi networks for Matter devices.

NXP has announced the release of what it claims is the industry's first secure monolithic tri-radio part to offer support for Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2, and 802.15.4 — all simultaneously: the NXP IW612.

"With the IW612, developers can leverage different wireless connectivity protocols on a single device to create an easy-to-use, secure product for smart home, industrial and automotive use cases," claims NXP's Larry Olivas of his division's latest product. "From door locks and smart speakers to in-vehicle entertainment and telematics, products can now benefit from our tri-radio solutions that address multiple technologies and ecosystems, including Matter. This provides developers with a more cost-effective solution while streamlining deployment for the consumer."

NXP's new IW612 offers Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.2, and 802.15.4 connectivity — all at the same time. (📷: NXP)

Designed to boost interoperability in the Internet of Things (IoT) by giving designers the ability to communicate across three different communications standards, the IW612 includes Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2, and 802.15.4 support — the latter compatible with Matter, formerly known as Connected Home over IP (CHIP), with Thread mesh support.

Adding an IW612 into a Matter network, meanwhile, allows devices to communicate with each other regardless of whether they're connected on Wi-Fi or Thread — effectively bridging the two networks.

The company is positioning the part for routers, bridges, and gateways for IoT networks. (📷: NXP)

The triple-radio design isn't the only selling point of NXP's IW612, though: The company is heavily pushing its security features, including secure boot functionality, secured debug capabilities, and over-the-air firmware updates, as well as hardware cryptographic accelerators and support for WPA3 security on compatible Wi-Fi networks.

The part is designed, NXP says, for border routers, bridges, and gateways, and it comes pre-validated for connection to NXP's microprocessors and microcontrollers. While the part has been shown in action at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) this week, however, NXP hasn't announced a launch date or price — though with sample quantities are available on request.

More information is available on the company's product page.

ghalfacree

Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.

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