How ultra low power wireless networks and energy harvesting are going to make our planet a better place to live.

Document Sample
How ultra low power wireless networks and energy harvesting are going to make our planet a better place to live.
Description

The new generation of Ultra low power wireless technologies promise to revolutionize home and business electronics. New devices for games, home entertainment, security, business & home automation, industrial controls, health monitoring, retail signage, etc., will be able to function on a single cell watch battery for decades or may be able to entirely dispense with batteries by harvesting energy directly from the environment around them.

No More Batteries

By Cees Links, GreenPeak Technologies



How ultra low power wireless networks and energy harvesting are going to make our planet a

better place to live.









CAPTION: No more batteries



Increasingly, we rely on networks of sensors and controllers to make our lives more convenient.

Sensors in the home can help control temperature – sensors in an office building can help

maintain security and ensure that lights are turned off when there are no humans present. Even

our remote controls that we use to turn on our TVs and home entertainment systems are

essentially sense- and control elements. In industrial and warehouse locations, wireless sensors

are mounted in locations that cannot be easily wired or are inaccessible. Out in the fields, farms

are using wireless sensors to monitor soil humidity and conditions. In many offices, thousands of

battery powered security sensors are attached to doors and windows for security and access

purposes.



The common denominator for many of these common applications are batteries. Batteries - that

need to be changed or recharged when they run out of power. Batteries with toxic chemicals and

heavy metals can pollute our environment during the manufacturing process as well as when they

are disposed of.



The solution has two components and both are happening now.



Energy Harvesting



First, energy-harvesting technologies are becoming more efficient and more affordable. Energy

harvesting is a technology whereby energy is gathered from the environment around us. The

most common and well-known energy harvesting technology is the solar cell but there are many

others that are emerging.



Scientists have discovered that it is possible to get energy from noise, vibration and movement.

Power can be generated from the difference between internal and external temperatures. One day

soon, it is possible we will see personal mobile health monitoring networks that are powered by

the patient’s own body temperature and their daily activities and movements. Researchers are

currently developing ways to extract energy from plants and use it to help power a network of

sensors and transmitters. These could be used to monitor weather and soil conditions for

agriculture, help predict and prevent forest fires, as well as power home sensor products.



Or even more advanced: in many busy offices, there is enough energy bouncing of the windows

from the traffic poise outside or the employee’s activities inside including their voices, to run a

network of sensors – for security, for environmental monitoring or for simply turning on and off

lights as employees enter and leave rooms.



Energy harvesting (or scavenging) is an exciting technology development that could slash our

battery addiction. Instead of relying on batteries or even power from the grid this next generation

of wireless devices can be powered by energy that is available in the environment.

Unfortunately, energy harvesting is still not ready for prime time. Aside from solar cells, no

cheap and high volume solutions are in sight. So far, solar cells are the only energy harvesters

that are being produced in high volume and at the low cost required by sense and control

networks. However, to overcome solar’s “dark shortcomings”, small batteries are still required to

store power during dark times.



Low Power Wireless Networks



The second technology development is the emergence of a new generation of ultra low power

wireless networks that can be powered either by the low currents generated by energy harvesting

or, because of their low power draw, can function for years on a single small cell battery. Based

on the IEEE 802.15.4 wireless standard (comparable to Wi-Fi but dedicated for sense- and

control networks because of requiring much lower power), these ultra low power networks are

targeted to applications that require reliable connections but do not need a lot of bandwidth.



One simple application is using human finger power generated by simply flicking a switch or

turning a dial to wirelessly activate a light across the room. These also include medical

applications where info about body temperature and heart rate need to be transmitted every few

minutes, security networks which need to indicate whether a door or window is open or closed,

home automation systems where information to control air conditioners and heating needs to be

sent every five minutes or so, or applications that require controlling other machines and devices.

For example, at CES, GreenPeak Technologies rolled out several remote control designs for

consumer electronics that can function for 15 YEARS on a single cell battery.



By using a wireless mesh network architecture, the information can be relayed from one wireless

sensor unit to another until it reaches the central router or controller, thereby extending the range.

The mesh network also allows for changes in the network. For example, if a sensor is located on

the far side of a facility and a large truck is temporarily parked between it and the main

controller, the signal can bounce to other sensors in the facility, around the obstruction, ensuring

that the messages get delivered.



By using energy harvesting and ultra low power wireless mesh networks, our world can become

a greener place.

Eliminating all batteries and their toxic chemicals is not yet a reality, but with every passing day,

as the technology matures and costs drop, this dream of No Batteries Needed is coming every

closer.



Cees Links is CEO and founder of GreenPeak Technologies, based in Utrecht, The Netherlands. He has prior experience

in wireless networks at NCR Computers, Lucent Technologies and Agere Systems and was involved in establishing the

IEEE 802.11 standard,,the Wi-Fi Alliance, and IEEE 802.15 standardization committee. Cees holds a Masters degree in

Applied Mathematics and a Bachelors degree in Electrical Engineering from the Twente University of Technology in

Enschede, The Netherlands.



GreenPeak Technologies

+31-30-262-1157

www.greenpeak.com



SUMMARY



The new generation of Ultra low power wireless technologies promise to revolutionize home and

business electronics. New devices for games, home entertainment, security, business & home

automation, industrial controls, health monitoring, retail signage, etc., will be able to function on

a single cell watch battery for decades or may be able to entirely dispense with batteries by

harvesting energy directly from the environment around them.



KEY WORDS



Energy harvesting, wireless, ultra low power wireless, ZigBee, RF4CE, 802.15.4, remote

controls, green, green technology, low power routing


Share This Document



Other docs by Mark Shapiro
by registering with docstoc.com you agree to our
privacy policy

You are almost ready to download!

You are almost ready to download!