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MEMS-based near-zero power infrared wireless sensor node
27
Citations
9
References
2018
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringEducationLow Cost SensorSensing (Management Information Systems)Palm-sized Ir WsnSensor TechnologyMicro-electromechanical SystemElectronic DevicesSensing (Sensor Engineering)InstrumentationMems-based Near-zero PowerElectrical EngineeringEnergy HarvestingInfrared TechnologyStandby Power ConsumptionInfrared SensingIr WsnMicroelectronicsOptical SensorsBiomedical SensorsSensorsInfrared SensorWireless Power TransferSensor DesignTechnology
This paper reports on the first demonstration of an infrared (IR) wireless sensor node (WSN) with near-zero standby power consumption. The prototype presented here employs a plasmonically-enhanced micromechanical photoswitch (PMP) that exploits the energy contained in the impinging IR spectral band of interest itself, to perform passive sensing and digitizing functions. The palm-sized IR WSN demonstrated in this work comprises a vacuum-packaged PMP (IR power threshold ~284 nW, lithographically-defined IR absorptance: ~89% at 4.6 μm, 0.75 μm bandwidth) connected to a CMOS load-switch which wakes up a coin battery-powered sub 1-GHz wireless microcontroller to transmit data when the IR signal of interest is detected. The standby power consumption for the IR WSN was measured to be just ~2.6 nW: a >1900X improvement over state-of-the-art pyroelectric IR WSNs, while offering integrated spectral-selectivity. This work represents the first demonstration of an OFF-but-alert WSN that awakens only in the presence of a signal of interest, resulting in near-unlimited battery-life when deployed to detect infrequent but time-critical events.
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