Publication | Closed Access
Virtual Battery: An Energy Reserve Abstraction for Embedded Sensor Networks
28
Citations
22
References
2008
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringWireless Sensor SystemEnergy EfficiencyEnergy ReservesSensor ConnectivityEmbedded SystemsPrivate Reserve AbstractionGreen NetworkingSensor NetworksSystems EngineeringInternet Of ThingsPower-aware SoftwarePower-aware ComputingEnergy HarvestingEnergy VirtualizationComputer EngineeringMobile ComputingCollaborative Sensor NetworkSmart GridEnergy ManagementEdge ComputingVirtual BatteryPower-efficient ComputingEnergy-efficient Networking
This paper introduces the abstraction of energy reserves for sensor networks that virtualizes energy sources. It gives each of several applications sharing a platform the illusion of having its own private energy source. Energy virtualization is the next logical step in embedded systems after visualizing communication links and CPU capacity. Energy virtualization has not been addressed in past sensor network literature because most current wireless sensor networks feature single-user applications. To amortize deployment costs, future sensor networks, deployed in remote or hard- to-access areas, will likely be leveraged by scientists from different disciplines, each having their independent application for their individual research purposes. Platforms, planned for such deployment, will befitted with the union of sensors needed, but independent applications will share the remaining resources such as in-field storage and communication bandwidth, calling for quotas and isolation mechanisms. The most expensive resource shared in sensor networks is energy. This paper provides an energy isolation mechanism, called the virtual battery, that logically divides energy among applications to provide each its private energy reserve. An application can manage its private energy independently as if it were running alone on the platform. The application is terminated when its reserve is depleted. We implement and evaluate this abstraction on MicaZ motes running LiteOS. Our results show that the virtual battery mechanism succeeds at exporting the private reserve abstraction accurately and at a low overhead.
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