'Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)'
Doi
Abstract
Wake-up receivers (WuRxs) can improve the life-
time of a wireless sensor network by reducing energy consump-
tion from undesirable idle listening. The amplitude level of the
incoming RF signal is used by a WuRx to generate an interrupt
and wake up the radio of a sleeping sensor node. Existing passive
WuRx designs are generally based on RFID tags that incur high
cost and complexity. Thus, there is a need for cost-effective and
low-complexity WuRxs suited for both long-range and directed
wake-ups. In this work, we present a WuRx design using an RF
energy harvesting circuit (RFHC). Experimental results show that
our RFHC-based WuRx can provide a wake-up range sensitivity
around
4
cm/mW at low transmit RF powers (
<
20
mW),
which scales to a long wake-up range at high powers. Our
design also obtains accurate selective wake-ups. We finally present
simulation-based studies for optimizing the design of RFHCs that
enhance decoding efficiency with improved rise and fall times