Environment-driven Communication in Battery-free Smart Buildings

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-30
Author(s):  
Mauro Piva ◽  
Andrea Coletta ◽  
Gaia Maselli ◽  
John A. Stankovic

Recent years have witnessed the design and development of several smart devices that are wireless and battery-less. These devices exploit RFID backscattering-based computation and transmissions. Although singular devices can operate efficiently, their coexistence needs to be controlled, as they have widely varying communication requirements, depending on their interaction with the environment. The design of efficient communication protocols able to dynamically adapt to current device operation is quite a new problem that the existing work cannot solve well. In this article, we propose a new communication protocol, called ReLEDF, that dynamically discovers devices in smart buildings and their active and nonactive status and when active their current communication behavior (through a learning-based mechanism) and schedules transmission slots (through an Earliest Deadline First-- (EDF) based mechanism) adapt to different data transmission requirements. Combining learning and scheduling introduces a tag starvation problem, so we also propose a new mode-change scheduling approach. Extensive simulations clearly show the benefits of using ReLEDF, which successfully delivers over 95% of new data samples in a typical smart home scenario with up to 150 heterogeneous smart devices, outperforming related solutions. Real experiments are also conducted to demonstrate the applicability of ReLEDF and to validate the simulations.

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhilash Thekkilakattil ◽  
Sanjoy Baruah ◽  
Radu Dobrin ◽  
Sasikumar Punnekkat

2011 ◽  
Vol 271-273 ◽  
pp. 991-994
Author(s):  
Qing Fu Huang ◽  
Jian Wu Yang ◽  
Zhi Cheng Chen

With the development of the technology and society, the resolution of the wireless LAN would be the direction which is leading the smart home LAN’s construction, the IR, RF, Bluetooth, Zigbee, GPRS, and others wireless methods have been applied in the smart home smoothly, like the control, security, data transmission, now it is time to specified the rules for the wireless technology in the smart home, this paper introduces a kind of the smart home wireless bus protocol that based on the Modbus protocol, and the hardware and PC software have been designed for it, the project achieved the operation and communication among the nodes, the test realizes that it has the better data transmission mechanism when adopting the wireless bus protocol, and make sure the reliability of the data transmission between the nodes in the smart home.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (22) ◽  
pp. 10517
Author(s):  
V. Sivasankarareddy ◽  
G. Sundari ◽  
Ch. Rami Reddy ◽  
Flah Aymen ◽  
Edson C. Bortoni

Presently, due to the establishment of a sensor network, residual buildings in urban areas are being converted into smart buildings. Many sensors are deployed in various buildings to perform different functions, such as water quality monitoring and temperature monitoring. However, the major concern faced in smart building Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) is energy depletion and security threats. Many researchers have attempted to solve these issues by various authors in different applications of WSNs. However, limited research has been conducted on smart buildings. Thus, the present research is focused on designing an energy-efficient and secure routing protocol for smart building WSNs. The process in the proposed framework is carried out in two stages. The first stage is the design of the optimal routing protocol based on the grid-clustering approach. In the grid-based model, a grid organizer was selected based on the sailfish optimization algorithm. Subsequently, a fuzzy expert system is used to select the relay node to reach the shortest path for data transmission. The second stage involves designing a trust model for secure data transmission using the two-fish algorithm. A simulation study of the proposed framework was conducted to evaluate its performance. Some metrics, such as the packet delivery ratio, end-end delay, and average residual energy, were calculated for the proposed model. The average residual energy for the proposed framework was 96%, which demonstrates the effectiveness of the proposed routing design.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-12
Author(s):  
Javier Pinzón Castellanos ◽  
Miguel Antonio Cadena Carter

Fog Computing is the distributed computing layer that lies between the user and the cloud. A successful fog architecture reduces delay or latency and increases efficiency. This paper describes the development and implementation of a distributed computing architecture applied to an automation environment that uses Fog Computing as an intermediary with the cloud computing layer. This study used a Raspberry Pi V3 board connected to end control elements such as servomotors and relays, indicators and thermal sensors. All is controlled by an automation framework that receives orders from Siri and executes them through predetermined instructions. The cloud connection benefits from a reduced amount of data transmission, because it only receives relevant information for analysis.


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