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Wirelessly Powered Sensor Networks and Computational RFID [electronic resource] / edited by Joshua R. Smith.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2013Description: XIV, 271 p. 149 illus., 95 illus. in color. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781441961662
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 621.382 23
LOC classification:
  • TK1-9971
Online resources:
Contents:
Preface -- Range Scaling of Wirelessly Powered Sensor Systems -- History of the WISP Program -- The Wireless Identification and Sensing Platform -- System-On-Chip WISP: A 9 micro-Amp, Addressable Gen 2 Sensor Tag for BioSignal Acquisition -- Battery-less wireless sensors based on low power UHF RFID tags -- Passive RFID-based Wake-up Radios for Wireless Sensor Networks -- BAT: Backscatter Anything-to-Tag Communication -- Implementing the Gen 2 MAC on the Intel WISP -- WISP Monitoring and Debugging -- Maximalist Cryptography and Computation on the WISP UHF RFID Tag -- Security Enhanced WISPs: Implementation Challenges -- Power Optimized Waveforms That Enhance the Range of Energy Harvesting Sensors -- Wireless Ambient Radio Power -- Powering a VAD using the portable FREED System -- PORFIDO: Using neutrino telescopes and RFID to gather oceanographic data -- RFID-Vox: a Tribute to Leon Theremin.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The Wireless Identification and Sensing Platform (WISP) is the first of a new class of RF-powered sensing and computing systems.  Rather than being powered by batteries, these sensor systems are powered by radio waves that are either deliberately broadcast or ambient.  Enabled by ongoing exponential improvements in the energy efficiency of microelectronics, RF-powered sensing and computing is rapidly moving along a trajectory from impossible (in the recent past), to feasible (today), toward practical and commonplace (in the near future). This book is a collection of key papers on RF-powered sensing and computing systems including the WISP.  Several of the papers grew out of the WISP Challenge, a program in which Intel Corporation donated WISPs to academic applicants who proposed compelling WISP-based projects.  The book also includes papers presented at the first WISP Summit, a workshop held in Berkeley, CA in association with the ACM Sensys conference, as well as other relevant papers. The book provides a window into the fascinating new world of wirelessly powered sensing and computing.
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Preface -- Range Scaling of Wirelessly Powered Sensor Systems -- History of the WISP Program -- The Wireless Identification and Sensing Platform -- System-On-Chip WISP: A 9 micro-Amp, Addressable Gen 2 Sensor Tag for BioSignal Acquisition -- Battery-less wireless sensors based on low power UHF RFID tags -- Passive RFID-based Wake-up Radios for Wireless Sensor Networks -- BAT: Backscatter Anything-to-Tag Communication -- Implementing the Gen 2 MAC on the Intel WISP -- WISP Monitoring and Debugging -- Maximalist Cryptography and Computation on the WISP UHF RFID Tag -- Security Enhanced WISPs: Implementation Challenges -- Power Optimized Waveforms That Enhance the Range of Energy Harvesting Sensors -- Wireless Ambient Radio Power -- Powering a VAD using the portable FREED System -- PORFIDO: Using neutrino telescopes and RFID to gather oceanographic data -- RFID-Vox: a Tribute to Leon Theremin.

The Wireless Identification and Sensing Platform (WISP) is the first of a new class of RF-powered sensing and computing systems.  Rather than being powered by batteries, these sensor systems are powered by radio waves that are either deliberately broadcast or ambient.  Enabled by ongoing exponential improvements in the energy efficiency of microelectronics, RF-powered sensing and computing is rapidly moving along a trajectory from impossible (in the recent past), to feasible (today), toward practical and commonplace (in the near future). This book is a collection of key papers on RF-powered sensing and computing systems including the WISP.  Several of the papers grew out of the WISP Challenge, a program in which Intel Corporation donated WISPs to academic applicants who proposed compelling WISP-based projects.  The book also includes papers presented at the first WISP Summit, a workshop held in Berkeley, CA in association with the ACM Sensys conference, as well as other relevant papers. The book provides a window into the fascinating new world of wirelessly powered sensing and computing.

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