4,671 research outputs found
Analysis of Power-aware Buffering Schemes in Wireless Sensor Networks
We study the power-aware buffering problem in battery-powered sensor
networks, focusing on the fixed-size and fixed-interval buffering schemes. The
main motivation is to address the yet poorly understood size variation-induced
effect on power-aware buffering schemes. Our theoretical analysis elucidates
the fundamental differences between the fixed-size and fixed-interval buffering
schemes in the presence of data size variation. It shows that data size
variation has detrimental effects on the power expenditure of the fixed-size
buffering in general, and reveals that the size variation induced effects can
be either mitigated by a positive skewness or promoted by a negative skewness
in size distribution. By contrast, the fixed-interval buffering scheme has an
obvious advantage of being eminently immune to the data-size variation. Hence
the fixed-interval buffering scheme is a risk-averse strategy for its
robustness in a variety of operational environments. In addition, based on the
fixed-interval buffering scheme, we establish the power consumption
relationship between child nodes and parent node in a static data collection
tree, and give an in-depth analysis of the impact of child bandwidth
distribution on parent's power consumption.
This study is of practical significance: it sheds new light on the
relationship among power consumption of buffering schemes, power parameters of
radio module and memory bank, data arrival rate and data size variation,
thereby providing well-informed guidance in determining an optimal buffer size
(interval) to maximize the operational lifespan of sensor networks
Poster Abstract: MagoNode++ - A Wake-Up-Radio-Enabled Wireless Sensor Mote for Energy-Neutral Applications
The combination of low-power design, energy harvesting and ultra-low-power wake-up radios is paving the way for perpetual operation of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). In this work we present the MagoNode++, a novel WSN platform supporting energy harvesting and radio-triggered wake ups for energy- neutral applications. The MagoNode++ features an energy- harvesting subsystem composed by a light or thermoelectric harvester, a battery manager and a power manager module. It further integrates a state-of-the-art RF Wake-Up Receiver (WUR) that enables low-latency asynchronous communication, virtually eliminating idle listening at the main transceiver. Experimental results show that the MagoNode++ consumes only 2.8uA with the WUR in idle listening and the rest of the platform in sleep state, making it suitable for energy-constrained WSN scenarios and for energy-neutral applications
MH-REACH-Mote: supporting multi-hop passive radio wake-up for wireless sensor network
A passive wake-up radio in a wireless sensor network (WSN) has the advantage of increasing network lifetime by using a wake-up radio receiver (WuRx) to eliminate unnecessary idle listening. A sensor node equipped with a WuRx can operate in an ultra-low-power sleep mode, waiting for a trigger signal sent by the wake-up radio transmitter (WuTx). The passive WuRx is entirely powered by the energy harvested from radio transmissions sent by the WuTx. Therefore, it has the advantage of not consuming any energy locally, which would drain the sensor node's battery. Even so, the high amount of energy required to wake up a passive WuRx by a WuTx makes it difficult to build a multi-hop passive wake-up sensor network. In this paper, we describe and discuss our implementation of a battery-powered sensor node with multi-hop wake-up capability using passive WuRxs, called MH-REACH-Mote (Multi-hop-Range EnhAnCing energy Harvester-Mote). The MH-REACH-Mote is kept in an ultra-low-power sleep mode until it receives a wake-up trigger signal. Upon receipt, it wakes up and transmits a new trigger signal to power other passive WuRxs. We evaluate the wake-up range and power consumption of an MH-REACH-Mote through a series of field tests. Results show that the MH-REACH-Mote enables multi-hop wake-up capabilities for passive WuRxs with a wake-up range of 9.4m while requiring a reasonable power consumption for WuTx functionality. We also simulate WSN data collection scenarios with MH-REACH-Motes and compare the results with those of active wake-up sensor nodes as well as a low power listening approach. The results show that the MH-REACH-Mote enables a longer overall lifetime than the other two approaches when data is collected infrequently.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Efficient time synchronized one-time password scheme to provide secure wake-up authentication on wireless sensor networks
In this paper we propose Time Synchronized One-Time-Password scheme to
provide secure wake up authentication. The main constraint of wireless sensor
networks is their limited power resource that prevents us from using radio
transmission over the network to transfer the passwords. On the other hand
computation power consumption is insignificant when compared to the costs
associated with the power needed for transmitting the right set of keys. In
addition to prevent adversaries from reading and following the timeline of the
network, we propose to encrypt the tokens using symmetric encryption to prevent
replay attacks.Comment: International Journal Of Advanced Smart Sensor Network Systems
(IJASSN), Vol 3, No.1, January 2013
http://airccse.org/journal/ijassn/papers/3113ijassn01.pd
Low power wireless sensor network for structural health monitoring of buildings using MEMS strain sensors and accelerometers
Within the MEMSCON project, a wireless sensor network was developed for structural health monitoring of buildings to assess earthquake damage. The sensor modules use custom-developed capacitive MEMS strain and 3D acceleration sensors and a low power readout application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC). A low power network architecture was implemented on top of an 802.15.4 media access control (MAC) layer in the 900MHz band. A custom patch antenna was designed in this frequency for optimal integration into the sensor modules. The strain sensor modules measure periodically or on-demand from the base station and obtain a battery lifetime of 12 years. The accelerometer modules record during an earthquake event, which is detected using a combination of the local acceleration data and remote triggering from the base station, based on the acceleration data from multiple sensors across the building. They obtain a battery lifetime of 2 years. The MEMS strain sensor and its readout ASIC were packaged in a custom package suitable for mounting onto a reinforcing bar inside the concrete and without constraining the moving parts of the MEMS strain sensor. The wireless modules, including battery and antenna, were packaged in a robust housing compatible with mounting in a building and accessible for maintenance such as battery replacement
Droplet: A New Denial-of-Service Attack on Low Power Wireless Sensor Networks
In this paper we present a new kind of Denial-of-Service attack against the PHY layer of low power wireless sensor networks. Overcoming the very limited range of jamming-based attacks, this attack can penetrate deep into a target network with high power efficiency. We term this the Droplet attack, as it attains enormous disruption by dropping small, payload-less frame headers to its victim's radio receiver, depriving the latter of bandwidth and sleep time. We demonstrate the Droplet attack's high damage rate to full duty-cycle receivers, and further show that a high frequency version of Droplet can even force nodes running on very low duty-cycle MAC protocols to drop most of their packets
Low power wireless sensor network for building monitoring
A wireless sensor network is proposed for monitoring buildings to assess earthquake damage. The sensor nodes use custom-developed capacitive MEMS strain and 3D acceleration sensors and a low power readout ASIC for a battery life of up to 12 years. The strain sensors are mounted at the base of the building to measure the settlement and plastic hinge activation of the building after an earthquake. They measure periodically or on-demand from the base station. The accelerometers are mounted at every floor of the building to measure the seismic response of the building during an earthquake. They record during an earthquake event using a combination of the local acceleration data and remote triggering from the base station based on the acceleration data from multiple sensors across the building. A low power network architecture was implemented over an 802.15.4 MAC in the 900MHz band. A custom patch antenna was designed in this frequency band to obtain robust links in real-world conditions
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