DocumentCode :
625319
Title :
On the Effectiveness of Energy Metering on Every Node
Author :
Qiang Li ; Martins, Miguel ; Gnawali, Omprakash ; Fonseca, Rodrigo
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Houston, Houston, TX, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
20-23 May 2013
Firstpage :
231
Lastpage :
240
Abstract :
Making wireless sensor node platforms energy-efficient is one of the major research thrusts in the sensor network community. Energy metering lies at the foundation of this research, either by providing direct measurements for profiling, or by serving as the base for the formulation and fitting of energy-usage models. Most of the literature and tools, however, make their measurements on a very small subset of the node population, and usually at a single point in time, before deployment. In this paper we set out to evaluate the cost, in loss of precision, of not having constant and ubiquitous measurement. Through experiments on a 240-node sensor-network testbed, we find that the variations in energy consumption due to temperature change are small, and we establish a model between environmental temperature changes and power consumption of Quanto testbed motes. We also find that different nodes of the same kind can have up to 15% variation in power draw, suggesting a need to deploy instrumentation on a subset of nodes. We quantify the energy estimation error of different metering techniques and characterize the conditions in which the errors disappear. Overall, we find that a small number of measurements in time and across nodes is adequate for accurate estimation of network-wide energy use.
Keywords :
energy conservation; power consumption; power meters; wireless sensor networks; Quanto testbed motes; energy consumption; energy estimation error; energy metering; energy-usage models; environmental temperature changes; metering techniques; network-wide energy use; node population; power consumption; sensor network community; sensor-network testbed; ubiquitous measurement; wireless sensor node platforms; Computational modeling; Current measurement; Energy measurement; Hardware; Power measurement; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; energy model; measurement; mote variation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Distributed Computing in Sensor Systems (DCOSS), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Cambridge, MA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0206-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/DCOSS.2013.67
Filename :
6569430
Link To Document :
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