Emerging Zero-Standby Solutions for Miscellaneous Electric Loads and the Internet of Things
Despite technical advances in efficiency, devices in standby continue to consume up to 16% of residential electricity. Finding practical, cost-effective reductions is difficult. While the per-unit power consumption has fallen, the number of units continuously drawing power continues to grow. This wo...
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doaj-a5311a0178524be8a1211e04c0bc29052020-11-25T00:47:02ZengMDPI AGElectronics2079-92922019-05-018557010.3390/electronics8050570electronics8050570Emerging Zero-Standby Solutions for Miscellaneous Electric Loads and the Internet of ThingsDaniel L. Gerber0Alan Meier1Richard Liou2Robert Hosbach3Building Technology Urban Systems, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Berkeley, CA 94720, USABuilding Technology Urban Systems, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Berkeley, CA 94720, USAElectrical Engineering Computer Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USABuilding Technology Urban Systems, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Berkeley, CA 94720, USADespite technical advances in efficiency, devices in standby continue to consume up to 16% of residential electricity. Finding practical, cost-effective reductions is difficult. While the per-unit power consumption has fallen, the number of units continuously drawing power continues to grow. This work reviews a family of technologies that can eliminate standby consumption in many types of electrical plug loads. It also investigates several solutions in detail and develops prototypes. First, burst mode and sleep transistors are established as building blocks for zero-standby solutions. This work then studies the application of two types of wake-up signals. The first is from an optical transmission, and is applicable to remote-controlled devices with a line-of-sight activation, such as set-top boxes, ceiling fans, and motorized curtains. The second is from a wake-up radio, and is applicable to any wireless products. No single technology will address all standby power situations; however, these emerging solutions appear to have broad applicability to save standby energy in miscellaneous plug loads.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9292/8/5/570standby consumptionsleep transistorenergy harvestingburst modewake-up radio |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Daniel L. Gerber Alan Meier Richard Liou Robert Hosbach |
spellingShingle |
Daniel L. Gerber Alan Meier Richard Liou Robert Hosbach Emerging Zero-Standby Solutions for Miscellaneous Electric Loads and the Internet of Things Electronics standby consumption sleep transistor energy harvesting burst mode wake-up radio |
author_facet |
Daniel L. Gerber Alan Meier Richard Liou Robert Hosbach |
author_sort |
Daniel L. Gerber |
title |
Emerging Zero-Standby Solutions for Miscellaneous Electric Loads and the Internet of Things |
title_short |
Emerging Zero-Standby Solutions for Miscellaneous Electric Loads and the Internet of Things |
title_full |
Emerging Zero-Standby Solutions for Miscellaneous Electric Loads and the Internet of Things |
title_fullStr |
Emerging Zero-Standby Solutions for Miscellaneous Electric Loads and the Internet of Things |
title_full_unstemmed |
Emerging Zero-Standby Solutions for Miscellaneous Electric Loads and the Internet of Things |
title_sort |
emerging zero-standby solutions for miscellaneous electric loads and the internet of things |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Electronics |
issn |
2079-9292 |
publishDate |
2019-05-01 |
description |
Despite technical advances in efficiency, devices in standby continue to consume up to 16% of residential electricity. Finding practical, cost-effective reductions is difficult. While the per-unit power consumption has fallen, the number of units continuously drawing power continues to grow. This work reviews a family of technologies that can eliminate standby consumption in many types of electrical plug loads. It also investigates several solutions in detail and develops prototypes. First, burst mode and sleep transistors are established as building blocks for zero-standby solutions. This work then studies the application of two types of wake-up signals. The first is from an optical transmission, and is applicable to remote-controlled devices with a line-of-sight activation, such as set-top boxes, ceiling fans, and motorized curtains. The second is from a wake-up radio, and is applicable to any wireless products. No single technology will address all standby power situations; however, these emerging solutions appear to have broad applicability to save standby energy in miscellaneous plug loads. |
topic |
standby consumption sleep transistor energy harvesting burst mode wake-up radio |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9292/8/5/570 |
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