379 research outputs found

    Real-time and long lasting Internet of Things through semantic wake-up radios

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    The world is going towards the Internet of Things (IoT) where trillions of objects that are common in our lives will be enhanced and revolutionized by adding them computational and networking capabilities. Examples are cars, street lamps, industrial machinery, electrical appliances. The corner- stone of Internet of Things research is Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). These networks are made of hundreds of low-cost, low-complexity devices endowed with sensors to monitor the surrounding environment or objects. Typically these devices (also called sensors, nodes or motes) are battery-powered, therefore they can operate for a limited amount of time (i.e., days) before running out of energy. This is the main challenge that applications of Wireless Sensor Networks have to face. Since one of the major power consumers in a node is the radio transceiver, a lot of research effort has been put into finding solutions that keep the radio in a low-power state as much as possible, while not harming the communication capability. While this approach brings the network lifetime, i.e. the time before battery-operated nodes die having depleted their energy, to years or more, it introduces significant latency, as the energy reduction comes at the cost of not being able to reach nodes in deep sleep for long period of times. The most promising solution to this problem is the wake-up radio, an additional ultra-low power transceiver used for the sole purpose of triggering the activation of the high power, high bandwidth radio. Wake-up radio enabled IoT systems maintain always on their wake up radio, which has a negligible energy consumption, in this way optimizing both energy and latency performance metrics. Most of the research so far focused on the design of wake-up receivers, while a limited amount of communication protocols that take advantage of this radio has been proposed. Moreover, almost all of these protocols have been evaluated only through simulations. In this thesis we set to start filling this gap. We first evaluate the range performance of an ultra-low power wake-up receiver integrated into a state- of-the-art Wireless Sensor Network mote, the MagoNode++. Based on the results of this evaluation we deploy an outdoor testbed made of MagoNode++ motes. The testbed allows to validate in a real-world scenario our implementation of CTP-WUR, an extension of the widely used Collection Tree Protocol (CTP) for wake-up radio-enabled Wireless Sensor Networks. The comparison between CTP-WUR and CTP demonstrates that wake-up radios can effectively reduce the power consumption and obtain, at the same time, end-to-end latencies in the order of milliseconds, enabling new time critical applications. Based on the results and on the insights gained dur- ing the testbed evaluation a new version of CTP-WUR is presented that improves its performance across all the metrics taken into consideration: end-to-end packet latency, energy consumption and Packet Delivery Ratio

    A Long-range Context-aware Platform Design For Rural Monitoring With IoT In Precision Agriculture

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    The Internet of Things (IoT) applications has been developing greatly in recent years to solve communication problems, especially in rural areas. Within the IoT, the context-awareness paradigm, especially in precision agricultural practices, has come to a state of the planning of production time. As smart cities approach, the smart environment approach also increases its place in IoT applications and has dominated research in recent years in literature. In this study, soil and environmental information were collected in 17 km diameter in rural area with developed Long Range (LoRa) based context-aware platform. With the developed sensor and actuator control unit, soil moisture at 5 cm and 30 cm depth and soil surface temperature information were collected and the communication performance was investigated. During the study, the performance measurements of the developed Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) enabled Long Range Wide Area Network (LoRaWAN) gateway were also performed

    Low-Power Wide-Area Networks: A Broad Overview of its Different Aspects

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    Low-power wide-area networks (LPWANs) are gaining popularity in the research community due to their low power consumption, low cost, and wide geographical coverage. LPWAN technologies complement and outperform short-range and traditional cellular wireless technologies in a variety of applications, including smart city development, machine-to-machine (M2M) communications, healthcare, intelligent transportation, industrial applications, climate-smart agriculture, and asset tracking. This review paper discusses the design objectives and the methodologies used by LPWAN to provide extensive coverage for low-power devices. We also explore how the presented LPWAN architecture employs various topologies such as star and mesh. We examine many current and emerging LPWAN technologies, as well as their system architectures and standards, and evaluate their ability to meet each design objective. In addition, the possible coexistence of LPWAN with other technologies, combining the best attributes to provide an optimum solution is also explored and reported in the current overview. Following that, a comparison of various LPWAN technologies is performed and their market opportunities are also investigated. Furthermore, an analysis of various LPWAN use cases is performed, highlighting their benefits and drawbacks. This aids in the selection of the best LPWAN technology for various applications. Before concluding the work, the open research issues, and challenges in designing LPWAN are presented.publishedVersio

    Generic Home Automation System Using IoT Gateway Based on Wi-Fi and ant+ Sensor Network

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    This research article explores the use of internet of things (IoT) technology in home automation, including cloud computing and sensor networks to improve quality of life, and the increasing affordability through mobile connectivity. In this proposed smart home system, our main objective is to build a home automation system for the common consumer, which can help him to use home appliances with confidence and control at a low cost. The paper describes the building of an IoT gateway using the ANT multi-hop wireless network protocol and the Wi-Fi protocol, specifically utilizing the nRF24L01 and Esp8266 chips. Various sensor nodes, such as a water tank level sensor, human presence sensor, smart LED door sensor, and smart switch, will be integrated into the system. The main goal of the research is to develop an affordable solution for smart home technology for everyday consumers

    IEEE 802.11-Enabled Wake-Up Radio: use cases and applications

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    IEEE 802.11 is one of the most commonly used radio access technologies, being present in almost all handheld devices with networking capabilities. However, its energy-hungry communication modes are a challenge for the increased battery lifetime of such devices and are an obstacle for its use in battery-constrained devices such as the ones defined by many Internet of Things applications. Wake-up Radio (WuR) systems have appeared as a solution for increasing the energy efficiency of communication technologies by employing a secondary low-power radio interface, which is always in the active state and switches the primary transceiver (used for main data communication) from the energy-saving to the active operation mode. The high market penetration of IEEE 802.11 technology, together with the benefits that WuR systems can bring to this widespread technology, motivates this article’s focus on IEEE 802.11-basedWuR solutions. More specifically, we elaborate on the feasibility of such IEEE 802.11-based WuR solutions, and introduce the latest standardization efforts in this IEEE 802.11-based WuR domain, IEEE 802.11ba, which is a forthcoming IEEE 802.11 amendment, discussing its main features and potential use cases. As a use case consisting of green Wi-Fi application, we provide a proof-of-concept smart plug system implemented by a WuR that is activated remotely using IEEE 802.11 devices, evaluate its monetary and energy savings, and compare it with commercially available smart plug solutions. Finally, we discuss novel applications beyond the wake-up functionality that IEEE 802.11-enabled WuR devices can offer using a secondary radio, as well as applications that have not yet been considered by IEEE 802.11ba. As a result, we argue that the IEEE 802.11-based WuR solution will support a wide range of devices and deployments, for both low-rate and low-power communications, as well as high-rate transmissions.Postprint (author's final draft

    Duty-cycled Wake-up Schemes for Ultra-low Power Wireless Communications

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    In sensor network applications with low traffic intensity, idle channel listening is one of the main sources of energy waste.The use of a dedicated low-power wake-up receiver (WRx) which utilizes duty-cycled channel listening can significantlyreduce idle listening energy cost. In this thesis such a scheme is introduced and it is called DCW-MAC, an acronym forduty-cycled wake-up receiver based medium access control.We develop the concept in several steps, starting with an investigation into the properties of these schemes under idealizedconditions. This analysis show that DCW-MAC has the potential to significantly reduce energy costs, compared to twoestablished reference schemes based only on low-power wake up receivers or duty-cycled listening. Findings motivatefurther investigations and more detailed analysis of energy consumption. We do this in two separate steps, first concentratingon the energy required to transmit wake-up beacons and later include all energy costs in the analysis. The more completeanalysis makes it possible to optimize wake-up beacons and other DCW-MAC parameters, such as sleep and listen intervals,for minimal energy consumption. This shows how characteristics of the wake-up receiver influence how much, and if, energycan be saved and what the resulting average communication delays are. Being an analysis based on closed form expressions,rather than simulations, we can derive and verify good approximations of optimal energy consumption and resulting averagedelays, making it possible to quickly evaluate how a different wake-up receiver characteristic influences what is possible toachieve in different scenarios.In addition to the direct optimizations of the DCW-MAC scheme, we also provide a proof-of-concept in 65 nm CMOS,showing that the digital base-band needed to implement DCW-MAC has negligible energy consumption compared to manylow-power analog front-ends in literature. We also propose a a simple frame-work for comparing the relative merits ofanalog front-ends for wake-up receivers, where we use the experiences gained about DCW-MAC energy consumption toprovide a simple relation between wake-up receiver/analog front-end properties and energy consumption for wide ranges ofscenario parameters. Using this tool it is possible to compare analog front-ends used in duty-cycled wake-up schemes, evenif they are originally designed for different scenarios.In all, the thesis presents a new wake-up receiver scheme for low-power wireless sensor networks and provide a comprehensiveanalysis of many of its important properties
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