3,528 research outputs found

    Energy autonomous systems : future trends in devices, technology, and systems

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    The rapid evolution of electronic devices since the beginning of the nanoelectronics era has brought about exceptional computational power in an ever shrinking system footprint. This has enabled among others the wealth of nomadic battery powered wireless systems (smart phones, mp3 players, GPS, …) that society currently enjoys. Emerging integration technologies enabling even smaller volumes and the associated increased functional density may bring about a new revolution in systems targeting wearable healthcare, wellness, lifestyle and industrial monitoring applications

    GREEN RADIO COMMUNICATIONS IN 5G NETWORKS TO IMPROVE ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND REDUCE GLOBAL WARMING

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    The technology of green radio communication helps in reducing the emission of carbon and also helps in the process of reducing the consumption of energy by the base stations of wireless networks. In addition to that, with the help of tools such as Information Communication Technology (ICT) and Multi-Hop Relay Network (MHR), the functionalities and the operational attributes of the technology of green radio communication can be improved and the process of energy consumption gets better as well. It is found from the discussion that green networking technology has mainly two core components and the two core components are energy awareness and energy efficiency. The ability of the network to measure the cost per packet is called energy awareness. On the other hand, the ability of a network to decrease the contribution of carbon and extend the lifetime of the network can be called energy efficiency. In addition, the implementation of the technology of green radio communication helps in mitigating the issue of future energy crises. Additionally, it has also been understood that Green communication in terms of energy efficiency can help IT industry which has been extensively criticised for the contribution of the carbon emissions as well as the failure to respond to the negative impact on the whole climate. In fact, the next generation networks have imposed the challenges in terms of the provision of the energy efficient solutions which are provided and the transportation of the data along with the huge range of the quality of the services requirement as well as the tolerance of lower optimum services.The technology of green radio communication helps in reducing the emission of carbon and also helps in the process of reducing the consumption of energy by the base stations of wireless networks. In addition to that, with the help of tools such as Information Communication Technology (ICT) and Multi-Hop Relay Network (MHR), the functionalities and the operational attributes of the technology of green radio communication can be improved and the process of energy consumption gets better as well. It is found from the discussion that green networking technology has mainly two core components and the two core components are energy awareness and energy efficiency. The ability of the network to measure the cost per packet is called energy awareness. On the other hand, the ability of a network to decrease the contribution of carbon and extend the lifetime of the network can be called energy efficiency. In addition, the implementation of the technology of green radio communication helps in mitigating the issue of future energy crises. Additionally, it has also been understood that Green communication in terms of energy efficiency can help IT industry which has been extensively criticised for the contribution of the carbon emissions as well as the failure to respond to the negative impact on the whole climate. In fact, the next generation networks have imposed the challenges in terms of the provision of the energy efficient solutions which are provided and the transportation of the data along with the huge range of the quality of the services requirement as well as the tolerance of lower optimum services

    Making Image More Energy Efficient for OLED Smart Devices

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    Energy efficient enabling technologies for semantic video processing on mobile devices

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    Semantic object-based processing will play an increasingly important role in future multimedia systems due to the ubiquity of digital multimedia capture/playback technologies and increasing storage capacity. Although the object based paradigm has many undeniable benefits, numerous technical challenges remain before the applications becomes pervasive, particularly on computational constrained mobile devices. A fundamental issue is the ill-posed problem of semantic object segmentation. Furthermore, on battery powered mobile computing devices, the additional algorithmic complexity of semantic object based processing compared to conventional video processing is highly undesirable both from a real-time operation and battery life perspective. This thesis attempts to tackle these issues by firstly constraining the solution space and focusing on the human face as a primary semantic concept of use to users of mobile devices. A novel face detection algorithm is proposed, which from the outset was designed to be amenable to be offloaded from the host microprocessor to dedicated hardware, thereby providing real-time performance and reducing power consumption. The algorithm uses an Artificial Neural Network (ANN), whose topology and weights are evolved via a genetic algorithm (GA). The computational burden of the ANN evaluation is offloaded to a dedicated hardware accelerator, which is capable of processing any evolved network topology. Efficient arithmetic circuitry, which leverages modified Booth recoding, column compressors and carry save adders, is adopted throughout the design. To tackle the increased computational costs associated with object tracking or object based shape encoding, a novel energy efficient binary motion estimation architecture is proposed. Energy is reduced in the proposed motion estimation architecture by minimising the redundant operations inherent in the binary data. Both architectures are shown to compare favourable with the relevant prior art

    Ubiquitous Scalable Graphics: An End-to-End Framework using Wavelets

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    Advances in ubiquitous displays and wireless communications have fueled the emergence of exciting mobile graphics applications including 3D virtual product catalogs, 3D maps, security monitoring systems and mobile games. Current trends that use cameras to capture geometry, material reflectance and other graphics elements means that very high resolution inputs is accessible to render extremely photorealistic scenes. However, captured graphics content can be many gigabytes in size, and must be simplified before they can be used on small mobile devices, which have limited resources, such as memory, screen size and battery energy. Scaling and converting graphics content to a suitable rendering format involves running several software tools, and selecting the best resolution for target mobile device is often done by trial and error, which all takes time. Wireless errors can also affect transmitted content and aggressive compression is needed for low-bandwidth wireless networks. Most rendering algorithms are currently optimized for visual realism and speed, but are not resource or energy efficient on mobile device. This dissertation focuses on the improvement of rendering performance by reducing the impacts of these problems with UbiWave, an end-to-end Framework to enable real time mobile access to high resolution graphics using wavelets. The framework tackles the issues including simplification, transmission, and resource efficient rendering of graphics content on mobile device based on wavelets by utilizing 1) a Perceptual Error Metric (PoI) for automatically computing the best resolution of graphics content for a given mobile display to eliminate guesswork and save resources, 2) Unequal Error Protection (UEP) to improve the resilience to wireless errors, 3) an Energy-efficient Adaptive Real-time Rendering (EARR) heuristic to balance energy consumption, rendering speed and image quality and 4) an Energy-efficient Streaming Technique. The results facilitate a new class of mobile graphics application which can gracefully adapt the lowest acceptable rendering resolution to the wireless network conditions and the availability of resources and battery energy on mobile device adaptively

    Software-Defined Lighting.

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    For much of the past century, indoor lighting has been based on incandescent or gas-discharge technology. But, with LED lighting experiencing a 20x/decade increase in flux density, 10x/decade decrease in cost, and linear improvements in luminous efficiency, solid-state lighting is finally cost-competitive with the status quo. As a result, LED lighting is projected to reach over 70% market penetration by 2030. This dissertation claims that solid-state lighting’s real potential has been barely explored, that now is the time to explore it, and that new lighting platforms and applications can drive lighting far beyond its roots as an illumination technology. Scaling laws make solid-state lighting competitive with conventional lighting, but two key features make solid-state lighting an enabler for many new applications: the high switching speeds possible using LEDs and the color palettes realizable with Red-Green-Blue-White (RGBW) multi-chip assemblies. For this dissertation, we have explored the post-illumination potential of LED lighting in applications as diverse as visible light communications, indoor positioning, smart dust time synchronization, and embedded device configuration, with an eventual eye toward supporting all of them using a shared lighting infrastructure under a unified system architecture that provides software-control over lighting. To explore the space of software-defined lighting (SDL), we design a compact, flexible, and networked SDL platform to allow researchers to rapidly test new ideas. Using this platform, we demonstrate the viability of several applications, including multi-luminaire synchronized communication to a photodiode receiver, communication to mobile phone cameras, and indoor positioning using unmodified mobile phones. We show that all these applications and many other potential applications can be simultaneously supported by a single lighting infrastructure under software control.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/111482/1/samkuo_1.pd

    Intelligent Circuits and Systems

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    ICICS-2020 is the third conference initiated by the School of Electronics and Electrical Engineering at Lovely Professional University that explored recent innovations of researchers working for the development of smart and green technologies in the fields of Energy, Electronics, Communications, Computers, and Control. ICICS provides innovators to identify new opportunities for the social and economic benefits of society.  This conference bridges the gap between academics and R&D institutions, social visionaries, and experts from all strata of society to present their ongoing research activities and foster research relations between them. It provides opportunities for the exchange of new ideas, applications, and experiences in the field of smart technologies and finding global partners for future collaboration. The ICICS-2020 was conducted in two broad categories, Intelligent Circuits & Intelligent Systems and Emerging Technologies in Electrical Engineering

    Image Processing for Machine Vision Applications

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    L'abstract è presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen
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