Ultrasound Data Communications for Ultra-low-power Wake-up in Sensor Nodes

In the power-starved wireless sensor node application, the main transceiver has to be duty-cycled to prolong the node battery lifetime. Wake-up is among the lowest power schemes to accomplish this; an always ON low-power receiver called the wake-up receiver is used to turn ON the main receiver when...

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Main Author: Yadav, Kshitij
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/D87M0G23
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spelling ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-D87M0G232019-05-09T15:13:55ZUltrasound Data Communications for Ultra-low-power Wake-up in Sensor NodesYadav, Kshitij2012ThesesElectrical engineeringIn the power-starved wireless sensor node application, the main transceiver has to be duty-cycled to prolong the node battery lifetime. Wake-up is among the lowest power schemes to accomplish this; an always ON low-power receiver called the wake-up receiver is used to turn ON the main receiver when needed. In this thesis, we have demonstrated ultra-low-power wake-up by using through-air wireless ultrasound. We have achieved more than an order of magnitude reduction in wake-up receiver power consumption, compared to conventionally used radio frequencies. An ultra-low-power ultrasonic wake-up receiver IC was designed in a 65-nm CMOS process and has a power consumption of only 4.4 uW. For the proof-of-concept prototype demonstrated in this work, the digital back-end circuits were been implemented on a commercial FPGA. An ultrasound data network consisting of three receivers and one transmitter was set up in a lecture hall. For a transmit power of 27 uW, less than 10 % of the wake-up packets, at 1 pkt/s, were missed at each of the three receivers. All the system blocks: receiver IC, ultrasound communication channel and TX-RX transducer pair, were individually characterized in different environments to understand the interaction between the electrical and mechanical domains. Also presented are techniques for increasing the distance ranges of wireless ultrasound and communication schemes for extending the use of ultrasound to environments where line-of-sight communication is not possible.Englishhttps://doi.org/10.7916/D87M0G23
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical engineering
spellingShingle Electrical engineering
Yadav, Kshitij
Ultrasound Data Communications for Ultra-low-power Wake-up in Sensor Nodes
description In the power-starved wireless sensor node application, the main transceiver has to be duty-cycled to prolong the node battery lifetime. Wake-up is among the lowest power schemes to accomplish this; an always ON low-power receiver called the wake-up receiver is used to turn ON the main receiver when needed. In this thesis, we have demonstrated ultra-low-power wake-up by using through-air wireless ultrasound. We have achieved more than an order of magnitude reduction in wake-up receiver power consumption, compared to conventionally used radio frequencies. An ultra-low-power ultrasonic wake-up receiver IC was designed in a 65-nm CMOS process and has a power consumption of only 4.4 uW. For the proof-of-concept prototype demonstrated in this work, the digital back-end circuits were been implemented on a commercial FPGA. An ultrasound data network consisting of three receivers and one transmitter was set up in a lecture hall. For a transmit power of 27 uW, less than 10 % of the wake-up packets, at 1 pkt/s, were missed at each of the three receivers. All the system blocks: receiver IC, ultrasound communication channel and TX-RX transducer pair, were individually characterized in different environments to understand the interaction between the electrical and mechanical domains. Also presented are techniques for increasing the distance ranges of wireless ultrasound and communication schemes for extending the use of ultrasound to environments where line-of-sight communication is not possible.
author Yadav, Kshitij
author_facet Yadav, Kshitij
author_sort Yadav, Kshitij
title Ultrasound Data Communications for Ultra-low-power Wake-up in Sensor Nodes
title_short Ultrasound Data Communications for Ultra-low-power Wake-up in Sensor Nodes
title_full Ultrasound Data Communications for Ultra-low-power Wake-up in Sensor Nodes
title_fullStr Ultrasound Data Communications for Ultra-low-power Wake-up in Sensor Nodes
title_full_unstemmed Ultrasound Data Communications for Ultra-low-power Wake-up in Sensor Nodes
title_sort ultrasound data communications for ultra-low-power wake-up in sensor nodes
publishDate 2012
url https://doi.org/10.7916/D87M0G23
work_keys_str_mv AT yadavkshitij ultrasounddatacommunicationsforultralowpowerwakeupinsensornodes
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