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American Journal of Computer Science and Information Technology
ISSN: 2349-3917
E u r o s c i c o n C o n f e r e n c e o n
3D Printing and Wireless
Technology
S e p t e m b e r 1 7 - 1 8 , 2 0 1 8
L i s b o n , P o r t u g a l
Wireless and Printing Technology 2018
L
ong life wireless sensors are necessary to realize trillion sensors universe
in IoT era. We have proposed beat sensors, wherein the interval times of
ID code transmissions correspond to physical quantity, thereby achieving
such advantages as low power consumption, low cost, small size, and high
accuracy of data. We have demonstrated the operations of the beat sensors
for measuring AC power consumption of electrical appliances, temperature
and DC current and long communication distance by data recovery algorithm.
In beat sensors, sensor nodes uniformly consume tiny power with time, so that
batteries for the sensor nodes last much longer than conventional IoT sensors,
using intermittent operations to reduce power consumption. Therefore, beat
sensors can be used in applications such as security, aquaculture, agriculture
and so on, in which long life of sensors are inevitable.
Biography
Koichiro Ishibashi has received his PhD degree from Tokyo
Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan in 1985. He joined
Central Research Laboratory, Hitachi Ltd in 1985, where he
investigated low power technologies for SH microprocessors
and high density SRAMs. He worked for Renesas Electronics
from 2004 to 2011, where he developed low power IPs, mainly
for SOCs used in mobile phones. He has been a Professor at
The University of Electro-Communications, Tokyo, Japan since
2011. He has presented more than 150 papers at international
conferences and has published papers in numerous journals.
He was awarded R&D 100 for the development of SH4 Series
Microprocessor in 1999. He is a Member of IEICE and a Fellow
of IEEE. His current research interests include IoT technologies
including ultra-low power LSI design technology, technologies
for energy harvesting sensor networks and applications and bio
sensor technology.
ishibashi@ee.uec.ac.jpBeat sensors for long life IoT applications
Koichiro Ishibashi, R Takitoge and D Manyvone
University of Electro-Communications, Japan
Koichiro Ishibashi et al., Am J Compt Sci Inform Technol 2018 Volume: 6
DOI: 10.21767/2349-3917-C2-005