58 research outputs found

    Medium Access Control in Energy Harvesting - Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Analysis of Power-aware Buffering Schemes in Wireless Sensor Networks

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    We study the power-aware buffering problem in battery-powered sensor networks, focusing on the fixed-size and fixed-interval buffering schemes. The main motivation is to address the yet poorly understood size variation-induced effect on power-aware buffering schemes. Our theoretical analysis elucidates the fundamental differences between the fixed-size and fixed-interval buffering schemes in the presence of data size variation. It shows that data size variation has detrimental effects on the power expenditure of the fixed-size buffering in general, and reveals that the size variation induced effects can be either mitigated by a positive skewness or promoted by a negative skewness in size distribution. By contrast, the fixed-interval buffering scheme has an obvious advantage of being eminently immune to the data-size variation. Hence the fixed-interval buffering scheme is a risk-averse strategy for its robustness in a variety of operational environments. In addition, based on the fixed-interval buffering scheme, we establish the power consumption relationship between child nodes and parent node in a static data collection tree, and give an in-depth analysis of the impact of child bandwidth distribution on parent's power consumption. This study is of practical significance: it sheds new light on the relationship among power consumption of buffering schemes, power parameters of radio module and memory bank, data arrival rate and data size variation, thereby providing well-informed guidance in determining an optimal buffer size (interval) to maximize the operational lifespan of sensor networks

    ENERGY-NEUTRAL DATA DELIVERY IN ENVIRONMENTALLY-POWERED WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    On the use of IEEE 802.15.4/ZigBee as federating communication protocols for Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Tese de mestrado. Redes e Serviços de Comunicação. Faculdade de Engenharia. Universidade do Porto, Instituto Superior de Engenharia. 200

    Design and deployment of a new wireless sensor node platform for building environmental monitoring and control

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    It is commonly agreed that a 15–40% reduction of building energy consumption is achievable by efficiently operated buildings when compared with typical practice. Existing research has identified that the level of information available to Building Managers with existing Building Management Systems and Environmental Monitoring Systems is insufficient to perform the required performance-based building assessment. The majority of today’s buildings are insufficiently sensored to obtain an unambiguous understanding of performance. The cost of installing additional sensors and meters is extremely high, primarily due to the estimated cost of wiring and the needed labour. From these perspectives wireless sensors technology proves to have a greater cost-efficiency while maintaining high levels of functionality and reliability. In this paper, a wireless sensor network mote hardware design and implementation are introduced particularly for building deployment application. The core of the mote design is based on the 8-bit AVR microcontroller, Atmega1281 and 2.4 GHz wireless communication chip, CC2420. The sensors were selected carefully to meet both the building monitoring and design requirements. Beside the sensing capability, actuation and interfacing to external meters/sensors are provided to perform different management control and data recording tasks

    Perpetual Sensing: Experiences with Energy-Harvesting Sensor Systems

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    Industry forecasts project the number of connected devices will outpace the global population by orders of magnitude in the next decade or two. These projections are application driven: smart cities, implantable health monitors, responsive buildings, autonomous robots, driverless cars, and instrumented infrastructure are all expected to be drivers for the growth of networked devices. Achieving this immense scale---potentially trillions of smart and connected sensors and computers, popularly called the "Internet of Things"---raises a host of challenges including operating system design, networking protocols, and orchestration methodologies. However, another critical issue may be the most fundamental: If embedded computers outnumber people by a factor of a thousand, how are we going to keep all of these devices powered? In this dissertation, we show that energy-harvesting operation, by which devices scavenge energy from their surroundings to power themselves after they are deployed, is a viable answer to this question. In particular, we examine a range of energy-harvesting sensor node designs for a specific application: smart buildings. In this application setting, the devices must be small and sleek to be unobtrusively and widely deployed, yet shrinking the devices also reduces their energy budgets as energy storage often dominates their volume. Additionally, energy-harvesting introduces new challenges for these devices due to the intermittent access to power that stems from relying on unpredictable ambient energy sources. To address these challenges, we present several techniques for realizing effective sensors despite the size and energy constraints. First is Monjolo, an energy metering system that exploits rather than attempts to mask the variability in energy-harvesting by using the energy harvester itself as the sensor. Building on Monjolo, we show how simple time synchronization and an application specific sensor can enable accurate, building-scale submetering while remaining energy-harvesting. We also show how energy-harvesting can be the foundation for highly deployable power metering, as well as indoor monitoring and event detection. With these sensors as a guide, we present an architecture for energy-harvesting systems that provides layered abstractions and enables modular component reuse. We also couple these sensors with a generic and reusable gateway platform and an application-layer cloud service to form an easy-to-deploy building sensing toolkit, and demonstrate its effectiveness by performing and analyzing several modest-scale deployments.PHDComputer Science & EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138686/1/bradjc_1.pd

    A comprehensive review of wireless body area network

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    Recent development and advancement of information and communication technologies facilitate people in different dimensions of life. Most importantly, in the healthcare industry, this has become more and more involved with the information and communication technology-based services. One of the most important services is monitoring of remote patients, that enables the healthcare providers to observe, diagnose and prescribe the patients without being physically present. The advantage of miniaturization of sensor technologies gives the flexibility of installing in, on or off the body of patients, which is capable of forwarding physiological data wirelessly to remote servers. Such technology is named as Wireless Body Area Network (WBAN). In this paper, WBAN architecture, communication technologies for WBAN, challenges and different aspects of WBAN are illustrated. This paper also describes the architectural limitations of existing WBAN communication frameworks. blueFurthermore, implementation requirements are presented based on IEEE 802.15.6 standard. Finally, as a source of motivation towards future development of research incorporating Software Defined Networking (SDN), Energy Harvesting (EH) and Blockchain technology into WBAN are also provided

    A cross-layer quality-oriented energy-efficient scheme for multimedia delivery in wireless local area networks

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    Wireless communication technologies, although emerged only a few decades ago, have grown fast in both popularity and technical maturity. As a result, mobile devices such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDA) or smart phones equipped with embedded wireless cards have seen remarkable growth in popularity and are quickly becoming one of the most widely used communication tools. This is mainly determined by the flexibility, convenience and relatively low costs associated with these devices and wireless communications. Multimedia applications have become by far one of the most popular applications among mobile users. However this type of application has very high bandwidth requirements, seriously restricting the usage of portable devices. Moreover, the wireless technology involves increased energy consumption and consequently puts huge pressure on the limited battery capacity which presents many design challenges in the context of battery powered devices. As a consequence, power management has raised awareness in both research and industrial communities and huge efforts have been invested into energy conservation techniques and strategies deployed within different components of the mobile devices. Our research presented in this thesis focuses on energy efficient data transmission in wireless local networks, and mainly contributes in the following aspects: 1. Static STELA, which is a Medium Access Control (MAC) layer solution that adapts the sleep/wakeup state schedule of the radio transceiver according to the bursty nature of data traffic and real time observation of data packets in terms of arrival time. The algorithm involves three phases– slow start phase, exponential increase phase, and linear increase phase. The initiation and termination of each phase is self-adapted to real time traffic and user configuration. It is designed to provide either maximum energy efficiency or best Quality of Service (QoS) according to user preference. 2. Dynamic STELA, which is a MAC layer solution deployed on the mobile devices and provides balanced performance between energy efficiency and QoS. Dynamic STELA consists of the three phase algorithm used in static STELA, and additionally employs a traffic modeling algorithm to analyze historical traffic data and estimate the arrival time of the next burst. Dynamic STELA achieves energy saving through intelligent and adaptive increase of Wireless Network Interface Card (WNIC) sleeping interval in the second and the third phase and at the same time guarantees delivery performance through optimal WNIC waking timing before the estimated arrival of new data burst. 3. Q-PASTE, which is a quality-oriented cross-layer solution with two components employed at different network layers, designed for multimedia content delivery. First component, the Packet/ApplicaTion manager (PAT) is deployed at the application layer of both service gateway and client host. The gateway level PAT utilizes fast start, as a widely supported technique for multimedia content delivery, to achieve high QoS and shapes traffic into bursts to reduce the wireless transceiver’s duty cycle. Additionally, gateway-side PAT informs client host the starting and ending time of fast start to assist parameter tuning. The client-side PAT monitors each active session and informs the MAC layer about their traffic-related behavior. The second component, dynamic STELA, deployed at MAC layer, adaptively adjusts the sleep/wake-up behavior of mobile device wireless interfaces in order to reduce energy consumption while also maintaining high Quality of Service (QoS) levels. 4. A comprehensive survey on energy efficient standards and some of the most important state-of-the-art energy saving technologies is also provided as part of the work
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