102 research outputs found

    An Overview of Own Tracking Wireless Sensors with GSM-GPS Features

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    Wireless Sensors (WS) mobility and pause time have a major impact directly influencing the energy consumption. Lifetime of a WS Network (WSN) depends directly on the energy consumption, thus, the hardware and software components must be optimized for energy management. This study aims to combine a compact hardware architecture with a smart energy management efficiency in order to increase ratio Lifetime/Energy Consumption, to improve the operating time on a portable tracking system with GPS/GSM/GPRS features and own power. In this paper we present the evolution of own WS tracking architecture with GPS/GSM/GPRS features, basic criterion being the lifetime combined with low power consumption. Concern was focused on hardware and software areas: Large number of physical components led to reconsideration of hardware architecture, while for software, we focused on algorithms able to reduce the number of bits in transmitted data packets, which help to reduce energy consumption. The results and conclusions show that the goal was achieved

    Design and Evaluation of IoT-Enabled Instrumentation for a Soil-Bentonite Slurry Trench Cutoff Wall

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    In this work, we describe our approach and experiences bringing an instrumented soil-bentonite slurry trench cutoff wall into a modern IoT data collection and visualization pipeline. Soil-bentonite slurry trench cutoff walls have long been used to control ground water flow and contaminant transport. A Raspberry Pi computer on site periodically downloads the sensor data over a serial interface from an industrial datalogger and transmits the data wirelessly to a gateway computer located 1.3 km away using a reliable transmission protocol. The resulting time-series data is stored in a MongoDB database and data is visualized in real-time by a custom web application. The system has been in operation for over two years achieving 99.42% reliability and no data loss from the collection, transport, or storage of data. This project demonstrates the successful bridging of legacy scientific instrumentation with modern IoT technologies and approaches to gain timely web-based data visualization facilitating rapid data analysis without negatively impacting data integrity or reliability. The instrumentation system has proven extremely useful in understanding the changes in the stress state over time and could be deployed elsewhere as a means of on-demand slurry trench cutoff wall structural health monitoring for real-time stress detection linked to hydraulic conductivity or adapted for other infrastructure monitoring applications

    The design and deployment of an end-to-end IoT infrastructure for the natural environment

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    Internet of Things (IoT) systems have seen recent growth in popularity for city and home environments. We report on the design, deployment, and use of the IoT infrastructure for environmental monitoring and management. Working closely with hydrologists, soil scientists, and animal behaviour scientists, we successfully deployed and utilised a system to deliver integrated information across these two fields in the first such example of real-time multidimensional environmental science. We describe the design of this system; its requirements and operational effectiveness for hydrological, soil, and ethological scientists; and our experiences from building, maintaining, and using the deployment at a remote site in difficult conditions. Based on this experience, we discuss key future work for the IoT community when working in these kinds of environmental deployments

    Smart Environmental Data Infrastructures: Bridging the Gap between Earth Sciences and Citizens

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    The monitoring and forecasting of environmental conditions is a task to which much effort and resources are devoted by the scientific community and relevant authorities. Representative examples arise in meteorology, oceanography, and environmental engineering. As a consequence, high volumes of data are generated, which include data generated by earth observation systems and different kinds of models. Specific data models, formats, vocabularies and data access infrastructures have been developed and are currently being used by the scientific community. Due to this, discovering, accessing and analyzing environmental datasets requires very specific skills, which is an important barrier for their reuse in many other application domains. This paper reviews earth science data representation and access standards and technologies, and identifies the main challenges to overcome in order to enable their integration in semantic open data infrastructures. This would allow non-scientific information technology practitioners to devise new end-user solutions for citizen problems in new application domainsThis research was co-funded by (i) the TRAFAIR project (2017-EU-IA-0167), co-financed by the Connecting Europe Facility of the European Union, (ii) the RADAR-ON-RAIA project (0461_RADAR_ON_RAIA_1_E) co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the Iterreg V-A Spain-Portugal program (POCTEP) 2014-2020, and (iii) the Consellería de Educación, Universidade e Formación Profesional of the regional government of Galicia (Spain), through the support for research groups with growth potential (ED431B 2018/28)S

    Enhancing Energy Efficiency of Wireless Sensor Network through the Design of Energy Efficient Routing Protocol

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    Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is known to be a highly resource constrained class of network where energy consumption is one of the prime concerns. In this research, a cross layer design methodology was adopted to design an energy efficient routing protocol entitled “Position Responsive Routing Protocol” (PRRP). PRRP is designed to minimize energy consumed in each node by (1) reducing the amount of time in which a sensor node is in an idle listening state and (2) reducing the average communication distance over the network. The performance of the proposed PRRP was critically evaluated in the context of network lifetime, throughput, and energy consumption of the network per individual basis and per data packet basis. The research results were analyzed and benchmarked against the well-known LEACH and CELRP protocols. The outcomes show a significant improvement in the WSN in terms of energy efficiency and the overall performance of WSN

    Cybersecurity of Industrial Cyber-Physical Systems: A Review

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    Industrial cyber-physical systems (ICPSs) manage critical infrastructures by controlling the processes based on the "physics" data gathered by edge sensor networks. Recent innovations in ubiquitous computing and communication technologies have prompted the rapid integration of highly interconnected systems to ICPSs. Hence, the "security by obscurity" principle provided by air-gapping is no longer followed. As the interconnectivity in ICPSs increases, so does the attack surface. Industrial vulnerability assessment reports have shown that a variety of new vulnerabilities have occurred due to this transition while the most common ones are related to weak boundary protection. Although there are existing surveys in this context, very little is mentioned regarding these reports. This paper bridges this gap by defining and reviewing ICPSs from a cybersecurity perspective. In particular, multi-dimensional adaptive attack taxonomy is presented and utilized for evaluating real-life ICPS cyber incidents. We also identify the general shortcomings and highlight the points that cause a gap in existing literature while defining future research directions.Comment: 32 pages, 10 figure

    Energy Data Analytics for Smart Meter Data

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    The principal advantage of smart electricity meters is their ability to transfer digitized electricity consumption data to remote processing systems. The data collected by these devices make the realization of many novel use cases possible, providing benefits to electricity providers and customers alike. This book includes 14 research articles that explore and exploit the information content of smart meter data, and provides insights into the realization of new digital solutions and services that support the transition towards a sustainable energy system. This volume has been edited by Andreas Reinhardt, head of the Energy Informatics research group at Technische Universität Clausthal, Germany, and Lucas Pereira, research fellow at Técnico Lisboa, Portugal

    Interwoven Waves:Enhancing the Scalability and Robustness of Wi-Fi Channel State Information for Human Activity Recognition

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    This PhD dissertation investigates the future of unobtrusive radio wave-based sensing, specifically focusing on Wi-Fi sensing in realistic healthcare scenarios. Wi-Fi sensing leverages the analysis of multi-path reflections of radio waves to monitor human activities and physiological states, providing a scalable solution without intruding on daily life.Wi-Fi-based sensing, particularly through channel state information, fits well in healthcare due to its ubiquitous presence and unobtrusiveness. As our society ages and populations grow, continuous health monitoring becomes increasingly critical. Existing solutions like wearable devices, audiovisual technologies, and expensive infrastructure modifications each have limitations, such as forgetting to wear devices, privacy invasions, and high costs. Channel state information-based sensing offers a promising alternative, enabling remote monitoring without the need for additional infrastructure changes.Nevertheless, implementing channel state information-based sensing in already congested Wi-Fi bands could present challenges in the future. Current solutions often exacerbate congestion by adding random noise, which can degrade network performance. These solutions also tend to address niche problems in idealistic settings, making it difficult to justify their use in everyday environments due to potential impacts on network latency and overall user experience.To realise the potential of Wi-Fi sensing, future solutions must integrate seamlessly with wireless communication networks, ensuring that sensing and communication processes coexist and collaborate effectively. This dissertation categorises the relationship between sensing and communication into three models: parasitic, opportunistic, and mutualistic. In the parasitic model, sensing operates independently of the wireless infrastructure, potentially adding noise and congestion. The opportunistic model leverages existing traffic flows, avoiding adverse effects on communication. The mutualistic model aims for a balance, enhancing both sensing and communication without compromising either function.The primary research objective is to enhance the robustness and scalability of channel state information-based sensing for human activity recognition, facilitating seamless integration into home environments with minimal impact on existing infrastructure. Overall, this dissertation provides an exploration of the challenges and solutions for unobtrusive Wi-Fi sensing in healthcare, paving the way for future advancements in the field

    A Map-algebra-inspired Approach for Interacting With Wireless Sensor Networks, Cyber-physical Systems or Internet of Things

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    The typical approach for consuming data from wireless sensor networks (WSN) and Internet of Things (IoT) has been to send data back to central servers for processing and analysis. This thesis develops an alternative strategy for processing and acting on data directly in the environment referred to as Active embedded Map Algebra (AeMA). Active refers to the near real time production of data, and embedded refers to the architecture of distributed embedded sensor nodes. Network macroprogramming, a style of programming adopted for wireless sensor networks and IoT, addresses the challenges of coordinating the behavior of multiple connected devices through a high-level programming model. Several macroprogramming models have been proposed, but none to date has adopted a comprehensive spatial model. This thesis takes the unique approach of adapting the well-known Map Algebra model from Geographic Information Science to extend the functionality of WSN/IoT and the opportunities for user interaction with WSN/IoT. As an inherently spatial model, the Map Algebra-inspired metaphor supports the types of computation desired from a network of geographically dispersed WSN nodes. The AeMA data model aligns with the conceptual model of GIS layers and specific layer operations from Map Algebra. A declarative query and network tasking language, based on Map Algebra operations, provides the basis for operations and interactions. The model adds functionality to calculate and store time series and specific temporal summary-type composite objects as an extension to traditional Map Algebra. The AeMA encodes Map Algebra-inspired operations into an extensible Virtual Machine Runtime system, called MARS (Map Algebra Runtime System) that supports Map Algebra in an efficient and extensible way. Map algebra-like operations are performed in a distributed manner. Data do not leave the network but are analyzed and consumed in place. As a consequence, collected information is available in-situ to drive local actions. The conceptual model and tasking language are designed to direct nodes as active entities, able to perform some actions on their environment. This Map Algebra inspired network macroprogramming model has many potential applications for spatially deployed WSN/IoT networks. In particular the thesis notes its utility for precision agriculture applications

    Wireless Sensor Networks

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    The aim of this book is to present few important issues of WSNs, from the application, design and technology points of view. The book highlights power efficient design issues related to wireless sensor networks, the existing WSN applications, and discusses the research efforts being undertaken in this field which put the reader in good pace to be able to understand more advanced research and make a contribution in this field for themselves. It is believed that this book serves as a comprehensive reference for graduate and undergraduate senior students who seek to learn latest development in wireless sensor networks
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