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An Overview of PicoRadio and Smart Dust KD Kang
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PicoRadio Sensor networks collect and disseminate wide ranges of environmental data Size, weight, cost & power consumption matter < 1cm 3, < 100mg, < $1, < 1uw Bluetooth > $10 & 100mw Range of a Pico node < 2m Self-configuring ad hoc networking is a must Multihop routing
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Main Properties of Sensor Networks – PicoRadio View Low sensor data rates Active duty cycle < 1% Location info make things simple Content- and location-based addressing
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Protocol Support Physical Layer Mudulation Coding & decoding MAC Layer Avoid message intereference Network Layer Determines the path for packet delivery
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Multihop networks Energy consumption proportion to r 4 Use several short intermediate hops Communication cost dominates Communication-computation trade-off
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Energy trade-offs Network discovery & maintenance may consume more energy than actual data transmissions Proactive routing Reactive routing Hybrid, e.g., directed diffusion
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Energy trade-offs Standby power Send & receive consume a lot of power, but Low data rate Careful medium access control Separate potentially conflicting transmissions in time and frequency/code domain More complex radio???
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Dynamic voltage scheduling Power consumption proportional to V 2 Aggressively reduce the voltage Careful! Turn-on takes time & power More efficient physical layer Application semantics
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Radio power saving Frequency Broadband Frequency hopping Time Spreading Time synchronization required Spatial Multiple antennas More expensive HW More antenna power consumption
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Energy Harvesting
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Smart Dust KD Kang
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Objective A few cubic “milimeter” size No more than 10 uw power consumption Float in the air Swallow to examine your body RF not viable Limited space for antenna High frequency Excessive power consumption Optical transmission Requires much less power than RF when a LOS is available Space-division multiplexing necessary
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Key ideas Passive optical transmission techniques Dust modes do not emit light Use CCR (corner-cube retroreflector) Requires an uninterrupted LOS Inherently directional
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Active transmitters Enable peer-to-peer communication between dust motes High power consumption Used for short duration burst-mode communication How to aim the beam toward the receiving part?
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Collision problems Uplink collisions May not be serious if Dust motes are sufficiently separated Transmissions are detected by different pixels Collisions due to peer-to-peer communications can be more serious
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