239 research outputs found

    Emerging embedded nonvolatile memory solution for ultra low power microcontroller systems

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    13301甲第4810号博士(工学)金沢大学博士論文本文Full 以下に掲載および掲載予定:1.IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits 27(4) pp.569-573 1992. IEEE. 共著者:M. Hayashikoshi, H. Hidaka, K. Arimoto, K. Fujishima 2.IEEE Transactions on Multi-Scale Computing Systems IEEE. 共著者:M. Hayashikoshi, H. Noda, H. Kawai, Y. Murai, S. Otani, K. Nii, Y. Matsuda, H. Kond

    Emerging embedded nonvolatile memory solution for ultra low power microcontroller systems

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    13301甲第4810号博士(工学)金沢大学博士論文要旨Abstract 以下に掲載および掲載予定:1.IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits 27(4) pp.569-573 1992. IEEE. 共著者:M. Hayashikoshi, H. Hidaka, K. Arimoto, K. Fujishima 2.IEEE Transactions on Multi-Scale Computing Systems IEEE. 共著者:M. Hayashikoshi, H. Noda, H. Kawai, Y. Murai, S. Otani, K. Nii, Y. Matsuda, H. Kond

    Energy-Efficient System Architectures for Intermittently-Powered IoT Devices

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    Various industry forecasts project that, by 2020, there will be around 50 billion devices connected to the Internet of Things (IoT), helping to engineer new solutions to societal-scale problems such as healthcare, energy conservation, transportation, etc. Most of these devices will be wireless due to the expense, inconvenience, or in some cases, the sheer infeasibility of wiring them. With no cord for power and limited space for a battery, powering these devices for operating in a set-and-forget mode (i.e., achieve several months to possibly years of unattended operation) becomes a daunting challenge. Environmental energy harvesting (where the system powers itself using energy that it scavenges from its operating environment) has been shown to be a promising and viable option for powering these IoT devices. However, ambient energy sources (such as vibration, wind, RF signals) are often minuscule, unreliable, and intermittent in nature, which can lead to frequent intervals of power loss. Performing computations reliably in the face of such power supply interruptions is challenging

    Optimizing Embedded Software of Self-Powered IoT Edge Devices for Transient Computing

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    IoT edge computing becomes increasingly popular as it can mitigate the burden of cloud servers significantly by offloading tasks from the cloud to the edge which contains the majority of IoT devices. Currently, there are trillions of edge devices all over the world, and this number keeps increasing. A vast amount of edge devices work under power-constrained scenarios such as for outdoor environmental monitoring. Considering the cost and sustainability, in the long run, self-powering through energy harvesting technology is preferred for these IoT edge devices. Nevertheless, a common and critical drawback of self-powered IoT edge devices is that their runtime states in volatile memory such as SRAM will be lost during the power outage. Thanks to the state-of-the-art non-volatile processor (NVP), the runtime volatile states can be saved into the on-chip non-volatile memory before the power outage and recovered when harvesting power becomes available. Yet the potential of a self-powered IoT edge device is still hindered by the intrinsic low energy efficiency and reliability. In order to fully exert the potentials of existing self-powered IoT edge devices, this dissertation aims at optimizing the energy efficiency and reliability of self-powered IoT edge devices through several software approaches. First, to prevent execution progress loss during the power outage, NVP-aware task schedulers are proposed to maximize the overall task execution progress especially for the atomic tasks of which the unfinished progress is subjected to loss regardless of having been checkpointed. Second, to minimize both the time and energy overheads of checkpointing operations on non-volatile memory, an intelligent checkpointing scheme is proposed which can not only ensure a successful checkpointing but also predict the necessity of conducting checkpointing to avoid excessive checkpointing overhead. Third, to avoid inappropriate runtime CPU clock frequency with low energy utility, a CPU frequency modulator is proposed which adjusts the runtime CPU clock frequency adaptively. Finally, to thrive in ultra-low harvesting power scenarios, a light-weight software paradigm is proposed to help maximize the energy extraction rate of the energy harvester and power regulator bundle. Besides, checkpointing is also optimized for more energy-efficient and light-weight operation

    Ag-IoT for crop and environment monitoring: Past, present, and future

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    CONTEXT: Automated monitoring of the soil-plant-atmospheric continuum at a high spatiotemporal resolution is a key to transform the labor-intensive, experience-based decision making to an automatic, data-driven approach in agricultural production. Growers could make better management decisions by leveraging the real-time field data while researchers could utilize these data to answer key scientific questions. Traditionally, data collection in agricultural fields, which largely relies on human labor, can only generate limited numbers of data points with low resolution and accuracy. During the last two decades, crop monitoring has drastically evolved with the advancement of modern sensing technologies. Most importantly, the introduction of IoT (Internet of Things) into crop, soil, and microclimate sensing has transformed crop monitoring into a quantitative and data-driven work from a qualitative and experience-based task. OBJECTIVE: Ag-IoT systems enable a data pipeline for modern agriculture that includes data collection, transmission, storage, visualization, analysis, and decision-making. This review serves as a technical guide for Ag-IoT system design and development for crop, soil, and microclimate monitoring. METHODS: It highlighted Ag-IoT platforms presented in 115 academic publications between 2011 and 2021 worldwide. These publications were analyzed based on the types of sensors and actuators used, main control boards, types of farming, crops observed, communication technologies and protocols, power supplies, and energy storage used in Ag-IoT platforms

    Low-power emerging memristive designs towards secure hardware systems for applications in internet of things

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    Emerging memristive devices offer enormous advantages for applications such as non-volatile memories and in-memory computing (IMC), but there is a rising interest in using memristive technologies for security applications in the era of internet of things (IoT). In this review article, for achieving secure hardware systems in IoT, low-power design techniques based on emerging memristive technology for hardware security primitives/systems are presented. By reviewing the state-of-the-art in three highlighted memristive application areas, i.e. memristive non-volatile memory, memristive reconfigurable logic computing and memristive artificial intelligent computing, their application-level impacts on the novel implementations of secret key generation, crypto functions and machine learning attacks are explored, respectively. For the low-power security applications in IoT, it is essential to understand how to best realize cryptographic circuitry using memristive circuitries, and to assess the implications of memristive crypto implementations on security and to develop novel computing paradigms that will enhance their security. This review article aims to help researchers to explore security solutions, to analyze new possible threats and to develop corresponding protections for the secure hardware systems based on low-cost memristive circuit designs
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