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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Realistic Power Consumption Model for Wireless Sensor Network Devices

Qin Wang, +2 more
- Vol. 1, pp 286-295
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TLDR
A realistic power consumption model of wireless communication subsystems typically used in many sensor network node devices is presented and it is shown that whenever single hop routing is possible it is almost always more power efficient than multi-hop routing.
Abstract
A realistic power consumption model of wireless communication subsystems typically used in many sensor network node devices is presented. Simple power consumption models for major components are individually identified, and the effective transmission range of a sensor node is modeled by the output power of the transmitting power amplifier, sensitivity of the receiving low noise amplifier, and RF environment. Using this basic model, conditions for minimum sensor network power consumption are derived for communication of sensor data from a source device to a destination node. Power consumption model parameters are extracted for two types of wireless sensor nodes that are widely used and commercially available. For typical hardware configurations and RF environments, it is shown that whenever single hop routing is possible it is almost always more power efficient than multi-hop routing. Further consideration of communication protocol overhead also shows that single hop routing will be more power efficient compared to multi-hop routing under realistic circumstances. This power consumption model can be used to guide design choices at many different layers of the design space including, topology design, node placement, energy efficient routing schemes, power management and the hardware design of future wireless sensor network devices

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Energy-Efficient Routing Protocols in Wireless Sensor Networks: A Survey

TL;DR: The classification initially proposed by Al-Karaki, is expanded, in order to enhance all the proposed papers since 2004 and to better describe which issues/operations in each protocol illustrate/enhance the energy-efficiency issues.
Book ChapterDOI

A survey on localization for mobile wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: This paper provides taxonomies for mobile wireless sensors and localization, including common architectures, measurement techniques, and localization algorithms, and concludes with a description of real-world mobile sensor applications that require position estimation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Power of Models: Modeling Power Consumption for IoT Devices

TL;DR: A comprehensive model for the power consumption of wireless sensor nodes is presented, which takes a system-level perspective to account for all energy expenditures: communications, acquisition and processing and results in a new framework for studying and analyzing the energy life-cycles in applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wearable and flexible sensors for user-interactive health-monitoring devices.

TL;DR: This review introduces flexible and wearable sensors based on engineered functional nano/micro-materials with unique sensing capabilities for detection of physical and electrophysiological vital signs of humans and describes potential challenges of developing current wearable healthcare devices for applications in fitness, medical diagnosis, prosthetics, and robotics.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Impact of heterogeneous deployment on lifetime sensing coverage in sensor networks

TL;DR: The results show that using an optimal mixture of many inexpensive low-capability devices and some expensive high-capable devices can significantly extend the duration of a network's sensing performance.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Twelve reasons not to route over many short hops

TL;DR: Twelve reasons why short-hop routing is not as beneficial as it seems to be are listed, and the conclusion is that for many networks, long- hop routing is in every aspect a very competitive strategy.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Cross-layer Energy Analysis of Multi-hop Wireless Sensor Networks

TL;DR: It is argued that single-hop communications has up to 40% lower energy consumption than multihop forwarding within the feasible transmission distances of an ISM radio.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the optimum number of hops in linear wireless networks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered a wireless communication system with a single source node, a single destination node, and multiple relay nodes placed equidistantly between them and determined the number of hops that achieves a desired end-to-end rate with the least total transmission power.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A class A/B low power amplifier for wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: A class A/B low power amplifier suitable for an ad-hoc wireless sensor network is presented, implemented in a 0.13 /spl mu/m CMOS process and operates with a nominal 1.2 V supply.
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