| Literature DB >> 31936887 |
Omar A Saraereh1, Amer Alsaraira2, Imran Khan3, Bong Jun Choi4.
Abstract
The Internet-of-things (IoT) has been gradually paving the way for the pervasive connectivity of wireless networks. Due to the ability to connect a number of devices to the Internet, many applications of IoT networks have recently been proposed. Though these applications range from industrial automation to smart homes, healthcare applications are the most critical. Providing reliable connectivity among wearables and other monitoring devices is one of the major tasks of such healthcare networks. The main source of power for such low-powered IoT devices is the batteries, which have a limited lifetime and need to be replaced or recharged periodically. In order to improve their lifecycle, one of the most promising proposals is to harvest energy from the ambient resources in the environment. For this purpose, we designed an energy harvesting protocol that harvests energy from two ambient energy sources, namely radio frequency (RF) at 2.4 GHz and thermal energy. A rectenna is used to harvest RF energy, while the thermoelectric generator (TEG) is employed to harvest human thermal energy. To verify the proposed design, extensive simulations are performed in Green Castalia, which is a framework that is used with the Castalia simulator in OMNeT++. The results show significant improvements in terms of the harvested energy and lifecycle improvement of IoT devices.Entities:
Keywords: Internet-of-Things (IoT); energy harvesting; lifecycle; thermoelectric generator (TEG)
Year: 2020 PMID: 31936887 PMCID: PMC7014290 DOI: 10.3390/s20020407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Network illustration of an on-body IoT network. The on-body sensor communicates to a gateway, which then forwards the data to a central database with the hospitals.
Acronyms and their definitions used in this work.
| Acronym | Definitions |
|---|---|
| RF | Radio Frequency |
| ine DC | Direct Current |
| ine GPS | Global Positioning System |
| ine TEG | Thermoelectric Generator |
| TEH | Thermoelectric Harvesting |
| EMR | Electronic Medical Record |
| ECG | Electrocardiogram |
| MOSFET | Metal–Oxide–Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor |
| NiMH | Nickel-Metal Hydride |
| JFET | Junction Field-Effect Transistor |
| MAC | Medium Access Control |
| ine CSMA/CA | Carrier Sense Multiple Access Collision Avoidance |
| TDMA | Time Division Multiple Access |
| PCE | Power Conversion Efficiency |
| 5G | Fifth Generation |
| GSM | Global System for Mobile Communications |
| WiFi | Wireless Fidelity |
| FM | Frequency Modulation |
| MWCDCT | Minimum Weight Coverage and Data Collection Tree |
| MC-OMLU | Multi-Commodity Online Maximum Lifetime Utility |
| IoT | Internet-of-Things |
| OMNeT++ | Objective Modular Network Testbed in C++ |
Energy harvesting estimates by Texas Instruments [30].
| Energy Source | Harvested Power ( |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Human | 4 |
| Industry | 100 |
|
| |
| Human | 25 |
| Industry | 1–10 |
|
| |
| Indoor | 10 |
| Outdoor | 10,000 |
|
| |
| GSM | 0.1 |
| Wi-Fi | 1 |
Comparison of various energy harvesting techniques.
| Type | Source of Availability | Energy Conversion Efficiency | Feasibility on Micro-scale Application |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Depends on weather | Varies depending on source | Not suitable as wind speed is not consistent |
|
| Always available for on-body application | Low | Considerable with power management circuit under specific temperature range |
|
| Maximum 6 hours of peak irradiance daily | Maximum during the peak irradiance | Considerable with charge controller |
|
| Available when there is a high-pressure water source | Depends on water pressure | Considerable only under specific flow rate of water |
|
| Available when there is movement and vibration | Depends on the motion | Very small energy and not suitable for many applications |
Figure 2Illustration of dedicated and ambient energy harvesting. (a) Dedicated Source; (b) Cellular Tower.
Figure 3Proposed hybrid energy harvesting receiver design.
Figure 4Thermal energy harvesting hardware components.
Figure 5The number of packets as a function of total number of IoT nodes in the network.
Figure 6The number of packets received (a) without interference, and (b) with interference.
Figure 7Energy profile: (a) the amount of energy drawn and (b) the remaining amount of energy.
Figure 8Comparative analysis of RF and thermal energy harvesting. TEH: Thermoelectric Harvesting.
Figure 9Comparison of hybrid energy harvesting design with and without energy harvesting.