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HUC
2010
Springer

SNUPI: sensor nodes utilizing powerline infrastructure

13 years 5 months ago
SNUPI: sensor nodes utilizing powerline infrastructure
A persistent concern of wireless sensors is the power consumption required for communication, which presents a significant adoption hurdle for practical ubiquitous computing applications. This work explores the use of the home powerline as a large distributed antenna capable of receiving signals from ultra-low-power wireless sensor nodes and thus allowing nodes to be detected at ranges that are otherwise impractical with traditional over-the-air reception. We present the design and implementation of small ultra-low-power 27 MHz sensor nodes that transmit their data by coupling over the powerline to a single receiver attached to the powerline in the home. We demonstrate the ability of our general purpose wireless sensor nodes to provide whole-home coverage while consuming less than 1 mW of power when transmitting (65 W consumed in our custom CMOS transmitter). This is the lowest power transmitter to date compared to those found in traditional whole-home wireless systems. Author Keyword...
Gabe Cohn, Erich P. Stuntebeck, Jagdish Pandey, Br
Added 09 Nov 2010
Updated 09 Nov 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where HUC
Authors Gabe Cohn, Erich P. Stuntebeck, Jagdish Pandey, Brian Otis, Gregory D. Abowd, Shwetak N. Patel
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