Publication | Open Access
Ambient Backscatterers Using FM Broadcasting for Low Cost and Low Power Wireless Applications
87
Citations
30
References
2017
Year
Wireless CommunicationsEngineeringRadio FrequencyRadio CommunicationBroadcast FrequencyRadio Frequency IdentificationElectromagnetic CompatibilityInternet Of ThingsSoftware-defined RadioLow CostAmbient BackscatterersAmbient BackscatteringAntennaComputer EngineeringRadio PropagationSignal ProcessingFm BroadcastingBackscatter CommunicationWireless PropagationRf Subsystem
Nowadays, the explosive growth of Internet-of-Things-related applications has required the design of low-cost and low-power wireless sensors. Although backscatter radio communication is a mature technology used in radio frequency (RF) identification applications, ambient backscattering is a novel approach taking advantage of ambient signals to simplify wireless system topologies to just a sensor node and a receiver (RX) circuit eliminating the need for a dedicated carrier source. This paper introduces a novel wireless tag and RX system that utilizes broadcast frequency modulated (FM) signals for backscatter communication. The proposed proof-of-concept tag comprises of an ultralow-power microcontroller (MCU) and a RF front-end for wireless communication. The MCU can accumulate data from multiple sensors through an analog-to-digital converter, while it transmits the information back to the RX through the frontend by means of backscattering. The front-end uses ON-OFF keying modulation and FM0 encoding on ambient FM station signals. The RX consists of a commercial low-cost software-defined radio which downconverts the received signal to baseband and decodes it using a suitable signal processing algorithm. A theoretical analysis of the error rate performance of the system is provided and compared to bit-error-rate measurements on a fixed transmitter-tag-RX laboratory setup with good agreement. The prototype tag was also tested in a real-time indoor laboratory deployment. Operation over a 5-m tag-reader distance was demonstrated by backscattering information at 2.5 kb/s featuring an energy per packet of 36.9 μJ.
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