Towards Microscale NFC-Enabled IoT Sensors: Physical and MAC Layer Design Analysis

Microscale sensors provide critical solutions in diverse fields, ranging from measurement, automation, and control in industrial, agricultural, and biomedical applications. However, their development is limited by many requirements and challenges, such as efficient powering and the selection of suit...

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Main Authors: Michael Okwori, Ali Behfarnia, Ali Eslami
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2020-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9089023/
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spelling doaj-f1dc917ea73e4978a08411281a598db82021-03-30T03:13:15ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362020-01-018880768808410.1109/ACCESS.2020.29932059089023Towards Microscale NFC-Enabled IoT Sensors: Physical and MAC Layer Design AnalysisMichael Okwori0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8827-8685Ali Behfarnia1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8225-8571Ali Eslami2https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7907-1930Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS, USADepartment of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS, USADepartment of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS, USAMicroscale sensors provide critical solutions in diverse fields, ranging from measurement, automation, and control in industrial, agricultural, and biomedical applications. However, their development is limited by many requirements and challenges, such as efficient powering and the selection of suitable wireless communication technologies. A number of wireless communication technologies have been deployed in these sensors, including terahertz (Thz) radio frequency and ultrasound. Designing sensors in micro-scale imposes challenges for any communication technique deployed. This paper investigates the use of magnetic induction-based backscatter communication in a microscale sensor. The aim here is to provide both physical and media access control (MAC) layer design analysis for a microscale mote that is powered inductively and communicates with a reader using backscattering. Magnetic induction-based communication and powering are demonstrated via analysis and simulation for the mote. Then, low-power modulation, error-correction coding, and suitable low-power MAC schemes with evidence of feasible implementation in microscale are explored. Results of the performance analysis indicate that the proposed design achieves communication at a range of at least a few centimeters (5-6 cm) with an acceptable bit error rate (BER). Finally, MAC layer analysis reveals the optimum number of motes to be deployed for various read delays and transmission rates.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9089023/Microscale motenear-field communicationIoT sensorlow-power modulationresource-constrained MAC
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Okwori
Ali Behfarnia
Ali Eslami
spellingShingle Michael Okwori
Ali Behfarnia
Ali Eslami
Towards Microscale NFC-Enabled IoT Sensors: Physical and MAC Layer Design Analysis
IEEE Access
Microscale mote
near-field communication
IoT sensor
low-power modulation
resource-constrained MAC
author_facet Michael Okwori
Ali Behfarnia
Ali Eslami
author_sort Michael Okwori
title Towards Microscale NFC-Enabled IoT Sensors: Physical and MAC Layer Design Analysis
title_short Towards Microscale NFC-Enabled IoT Sensors: Physical and MAC Layer Design Analysis
title_full Towards Microscale NFC-Enabled IoT Sensors: Physical and MAC Layer Design Analysis
title_fullStr Towards Microscale NFC-Enabled IoT Sensors: Physical and MAC Layer Design Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Towards Microscale NFC-Enabled IoT Sensors: Physical and MAC Layer Design Analysis
title_sort towards microscale nfc-enabled iot sensors: physical and mac layer design analysis
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Microscale sensors provide critical solutions in diverse fields, ranging from measurement, automation, and control in industrial, agricultural, and biomedical applications. However, their development is limited by many requirements and challenges, such as efficient powering and the selection of suitable wireless communication technologies. A number of wireless communication technologies have been deployed in these sensors, including terahertz (Thz) radio frequency and ultrasound. Designing sensors in micro-scale imposes challenges for any communication technique deployed. This paper investigates the use of magnetic induction-based backscatter communication in a microscale sensor. The aim here is to provide both physical and media access control (MAC) layer design analysis for a microscale mote that is powered inductively and communicates with a reader using backscattering. Magnetic induction-based communication and powering are demonstrated via analysis and simulation for the mote. Then, low-power modulation, error-correction coding, and suitable low-power MAC schemes with evidence of feasible implementation in microscale are explored. Results of the performance analysis indicate that the proposed design achieves communication at a range of at least a few centimeters (5-6 cm) with an acceptable bit error rate (BER). Finally, MAC layer analysis reveals the optimum number of motes to be deployed for various read delays and transmission rates.
topic Microscale mote
near-field communication
IoT sensor
low-power modulation
resource-constrained MAC
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9089023/
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