2,945 research outputs found

    Ultra-Low Power Wake Up Receiver For Medical Implant Communications Service Transceiver

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    This thesis explores the specific requirements and challenges for the design of a dedicated wake-up receiver for medical implant communication services equipped with a novel “uncertain-IF†architecture combined with a high – Q filtering MEMS resonator and a free running CMOS ring oscillator as the RF LO. The receiver prototype, implements an IBM 0.18μm mixed-signal 7ML RF CMOS technology and achieves a sensitivity of -62 dBm at 404MHz while consuming \u3c100 μW from a 1 V supply

    Efficient and Interference-Resilient Wireless Connectivity for IoT Applications

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    With the coming of age of the Internet of Things (IoT), demand on ultra-low power (ULP) and low-cost radios will continue to boost tremendously. The Bluetooth-Low-energy (BLE) standard provides a low power solution to connect IoT nodes with mobile devices, however, the power of maintaining a connection with a reasonable latency remains the limiting factor in defining the lifetime of event-driven BLE devices. BLE radio power consumption is in the milliwatt range and can be duty cycled for average powers around 30ÎĽW, but at the expense of long latency. Furthermore, wireless transceivers traditionally perform local oscillator (LO) calibration using an external crystal oscillator (XTAL) that adds significant size and cost to a system. Removing the XTAL enables a true single-chip radio, but an alternate means for calibrating the LO is required. Innovations in both the system architecture and circuits implementation are essential for the design of truly ubiquitous receivers for IoT applications. This research presents two porotypes as back-channel BLE receivers, which have lower power consumption while still being robust in the presents of interference and able to receive back-channel message from BLE compliant transmitters. In addition, the first crystal-less transmitter with symmetric over-the-air clock recovery compliant with the BLE standard using a GFSK-Modulated BLE Packet is presented.PHDElectrical and Computer EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162942/1/abdulalg_1.pd

    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

    Airborne forward pointing UV Rayleigh lidar for remote clear air turbulence (CAT) detection: system design and performance

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    A high-performance airborne UV Rayleigh lidar system was developed within the European project DELICAT. With its forward-pointing architecture it aims at demonstrating a novel detection scheme for clear air turbulence (CAT) for an aeronautics safety application. Due to its occurrence in clear and clean air at high altitudes (aviation cruise flight level), this type of turbulence evades microwave radar techniques and in most cases coherent Doppler lidar techniques. The present lidar detection technique relies on air density fluctuations measurement and is thus independent of backscatter from hydrometeors and aerosol particles. The subtle air density fluctuations caused by the turbulent air flow demand exceptionally high stability of the setup and in particular of the detection system. This paper describes an airborne test system for the purpose of demonstrating this technology and turbulence detection method: a high-power UV Rayleigh lidar system is installed on a research aircraft in a forward-looking configuration for use in cruise flight altitudes. Flight test measurements demonstrate this unique lidar system being able to resolve air density fluctuations occurring in light-to-moderate CAT at 5 km or moderate CAT at 10 km distance. A scaling of the determined stability and noise characteristics shows that such performance is adequate for an application in commercial air transport.Comment: 17 pages, 19 figures. Pre-publish to Applied Optics (OSA

    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

    Design and implementation of low complexity wake-up receiver for underwater acoustic sensor networks

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    This thesis designs a low-complexity dual Pseudorandom Noise (PN) scheme for identity (ID) detection and coarse frame synchronization. The two PN sequences for a node are identical and are separated by a specified length of gap which serves as the ID of different sensor nodes. The dual PN sequences are short in length but are capable of combating severe underwater acoustic (UWA) multipath fading channels that exhibit time varying impulse responses up to 100 taps. The receiver ID detection is implemented on a microcontroller MSP430F5529 by calculating the correlation between the two segments of the PN sequence with the specified separation gap. When the gap length is matched, the correlator outputs a peak which triggers the wake-up enable. The time index of the correlator peak is used as the coarse synchronization of the data frame. The correlator is implemented by an iterative algorithm that uses only one multiplication and two additions for each sample input regardless of the length of the PN sequence, thus achieving low computational complexity. The real-time processing requirement is also met via direct memory access (DMA) and two circular buffers to accelerate data transfer between the peripherals and the memory. The proposed dual PN detection scheme has been successfully tested by simulated fading channels and real-world measured channels. The results show that, in long multipath channels with more than 60 taps, the proposed scheme achieves high detection rate and low false alarm rate using maximal-length sequences as short as 31 bits to 127 bits, therefore it is suitable as a low-power wake-up receiver. The future research will integrate the wake-up receiver with Digital Signal Processors (DSP) for payload detection. --Abstract, page iv
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