1,667 research outputs found
Energy Management Policies for Energy-Neutral Source-Channel Coding
In cyber-physical systems where sensors measure the temporal evolution of a
given phenomenon of interest and radio communication takes place over short
distances, the energy spent for source acquisition and compression may be
comparable with that used for transmission. Additionally, in order to avoid
limited lifetime issues, sensors may be powered via energy harvesting and thus
collect all the energy they need from the environment. This work addresses the
problem of energy allocation over source acquisition/compression and
transmission for energy-harvesting sensors. At first, focusing on a
single-sensor, energy management policies are identified that guarantee a
maximal average distortion while at the same time ensuring the stability of the
queue connecting source and channel encoders. It is shown that the identified
class of policies is optimal in the sense that it stabilizes the queue whenever
this is feasible by any other technique that satisfies the same average
distortion constraint. Moreover, this class of policies performs an independent
resource optimization for the source and channel encoders. Analog transmission
techniques as well as suboptimal strategies that do not use the energy buffer
(battery) or use it only for adapting either source or channel encoder energy
allocation are also studied for performance comparison. The problem of
optimizing the desired trade-off between average distortion and delay is then
formulated and solved via dynamic programming tools. Finally, a system with
multiple sensors is considered and time-division scheduling strategies are
derived that are able to maintain the stability of all data queues and to meet
the average distortion constraints at all sensors whenever it is feasible.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Communications in March 2011; last
update in July 201
A survey of network lifetime maximization techniques in wireless sensor networks
Emerging technologies, such as the Internet of things, smart applications, smart grids and machine-to-machine networks stimulate the deployment of autonomous, selfconfiguring, large-scale wireless sensor networks (WSNs). Efficient energy utilization is crucially important in order to maintain a fully operational network for the longest period of time possible. Therefore, network lifetime (NL) maximization techniques have attracted a lot of research attention owing to their importance in terms of extending the flawless operation of battery-constrained WSNs. In this paper, we review the recent developments in WSNs, including their applications, design constraints and lifetime estimation models. Commencing with the portrayal of rich variety definitions of NL design objective used for WSNs, the family of NL maximization techniques is introduced and some design guidelines with examples are provided to show the potential improvements of the different design criteri
Distributed Detection and Estimation in Wireless Sensor Networks
In this article we consider the problems of distributed detection and
estimation in wireless sensor networks. In the first part, we provide a general
framework aimed to show how an efficient design of a sensor network requires a
joint organization of in-network processing and communication. Then, we recall
the basic features of consensus algorithm, which is a basic tool to reach
globally optimal decisions through a distributed approach. The main part of the
paper starts addressing the distributed estimation problem. We show first an
entirely decentralized approach, where observations and estimations are
performed without the intervention of a fusion center. Then, we consider the
case where the estimation is performed at a fusion center, showing how to
allocate quantization bits and transmit powers in the links between the nodes
and the fusion center, in order to accommodate the requirement on the maximum
estimation variance, under a constraint on the global transmit power. We extend
the approach to the detection problem. Also in this case, we consider the
distributed approach, where every node can achieve a globally optimal decision,
and the case where the decision is taken at a central node. In the latter case,
we show how to allocate coding bits and transmit power in order to maximize the
detection probability, under constraints on the false alarm rate and the global
transmit power. Then, we generalize consensus algorithms illustrating a
distributed procedure that converges to the projection of the observation
vector onto a signal subspace. We then address the issue of energy consumption
in sensor networks, thus showing how to optimize the network topology in order
to minimize the energy necessary to achieve a global consensus. Finally, we
address the problem of matching the topology of the network to the graph
describing the statistical dependencies among the observed variables.Comment: 92 pages, 24 figures. To appear in E-Reference Signal Processing, R.
Chellapa and S. Theodoridis, Eds., Elsevier, 201
IEEE Access Special Section Editorial: Wirelessly Powered Networks, and Technologies
Wireless Power Transfer (WPT) is, by definition, a process that occurs in any system where electrical energy is transmitted from a power source to a load without the connection of electrical conductors. WPT is the driving technology that will enable the next stage in the current consumer electronics revolution, including battery-less sensors, passive RF identification (RFID), passive wireless sensors, the Internet of Things and 5G, and machine-to-machine solutions. WPT-enabled devices can be powered by harvesting energy from the surroundings, including electromagnetic (EM) energy, leading to a new communication networks paradigm, the Wirelessly Powered Networks
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