DocumentCode :
1986394
Title :
Comparison between Preamble Sampling and Wake-Up Receivers in Wireless Sensor Networks
Author :
Su, Richard ; Watteyne, Thomas ; Pister, Kristofer S J
Author_Institution :
BSAC, Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
fYear :
2010
fDate :
6-10 Dec. 2010
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
5
Abstract :
Having a wake-up receiver constantly listening is often seen as a replacement for running a duty- cycled medium access control protocol on a commercial low-power radio chip. Wake-up receivers do offer a better latency while consuming negligible power. Recent wake-up receivers show an impressively low power consumption of 52μW, but at the cost of a sensitivity of -72dBm, 20-30dB higher than the sensitivity of a commercial radio chip. This difference in sensitivity causes the wake-up receiver to have a much smaller communication range than the commercially available low power radio. In practice, this translates into requiring a denser deployment, or having to add an external power amplifier. This paper discusses the applicability of wake-up receivers in low-power wireless multihop networks. We show how, at available sensitivity levels, a wake-up receiver helps reducing the power consumption, but also requires a dramatically higher design or deployment cost.
Keywords :
access protocols; receivers; wireless sensor networks; duty-cycled medium access control protocol; low-power wireless multihop networks; power 52 muW; preamble sampling; wake-up receivers; wireless sensor networks; Peer to peer computing; Power demand; Power generation; Receivers; Sensitivity; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Global Telecommunications Conference (GLOBECOM 2010), 2010 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Miami, FL
ISSN :
1930-529X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5636-9
Electronic_ISBN :
1930-529X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2010.5683411
Filename :
5683411
Link To Document :
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