What Is A Smart Dust?
Berkeley’s Smart Dust project, led by Professors
Pister and Kahn, explores the limits on size and power consumption in
autonomous sensor nodes. Size reduction is paramount, to make the nodes as
inexpensive and easy-to-deploy as possible. The research team is confident that
they can incorporate the requisite sensing, communication, and computing
hardware, along with a power supply, in a volume no more than a few cubic
millimeters, while still achieving impressive performance in terms of sensor
functionality and communications capability. These millimeter-scale nodes are
called “Smart Dust.” It is certainly within the realm of possibility that
future prototypes of Smart Dust could be small enough to remain suspended in
air, buoyed by air currents, sensing and communicating for hours or days on
end.
Smart Dust Technology
Integrated into a single package are:-
1.
MEMS sensors
2.
MEMS beam steering mirror for active optical transmission
3. MEMS corner cube retroreflector for passive
optical transmission
4.An
optical receiver
5.
Signal processing and control circuitory
6. A
power source based on thick film batteries and solar cells
This remarkable package has the ability to sense
and communicate and is self powered. A major challenge is to incorporate all
these functions while maintaining very low power consumption.
Operation Of The Mote
The Smart Dust mote is run by a microcontroller
that not only determines the tasks performed by the mote, but controls power to
the various components of the system to conserve energy. Periodically the
microcontroller gets a reading from one of the sensors, which measure one of a
number of physical or chemical stimuli such as temperature, ambient light,
vibration, acceleration, or air pressure, processes the data, and stores it in
memory. It also occasionally turns on the optical receiver to see if anyone is
trying to communicate with it. This communication may include new programs or
messages from other motes. In response to a message or upon its own initiative
the microcontroller will use the corner cube retro reflector or laser to transmit
sensor data or a message to a base station or another mote.
The primary constraint in the design of the Smart
Dust motes is volume, which in turn puts a severe constraint on energy since we
do not have much room for batteries or large solar cells. Thus, the motes must
operate efficiently and conserve energy whenever possible. Most of the time,
the majority of the mote is powered off with only a clock and a few timers
running. When a timer expires, it powers up a part of the mote to carry out a
job, then powers off. A few of the timers control the sensors that measure one
of a number of physical or chemical stimuli such as temperature, ambient light,
vibration, acceleration, or air pressure. When one of these timers expires, it
powers up the corresponding sensor, takes a sample, and converts it to a
digital word. If the data is interesting, it may either be stored directly in
the SRAM or the microcontroller is powered up to perform more complex
operations with it. When this task is complete, everything is again powered
down and the timer begins counting again.
Communicating From A Grain Of Sand
Smart Dust’s full potential can only be attained
when the sensor nodes communicate with one another or with a central base
station. Wireless communication facilitates simultaneous data collection from
thousands of sensors. There are several options for communicating to and from a
cubic-millimeter computer.
Radio-frequency and optical communications each
have their strengths and weaknesses. Radio-frequency communication is well
under-stood, but currently requires minimum power levels in the multiple
milliwatt range due to analog mixers, filters, and oscillators. If whisker-thin
antennas of centimeter length can be accepted as a part of a dust mote, then
reasonably efficient antennas can be made for radio-frequency communication.
While the smallest complete radios are still on the order of a few hundred
cubic millimeters, there is active work in the industry to produce
cubic-millimeter radios.
Moreover RF techniques cannot be used because of
the following disadvantages: -
1. Dust motes offer very limited space for
antennas, thereby demanding extremely short wavelength (high frequency
transmission). Communication in this regime is not currently compatible with
low power operation of the smart dust.
2. Furthermore radio transceivers are relatively
complex circuits making it difficult to reduce their power consumption to
required microwatt levels.
3. They require modulation, band pass filtering
and demodulation circuitry.
Corner Cube Retroreflector
These MEMS structure makes it possible for dust
motes to use passive optical transmission techniques ie, to transmit modulated
optical signals without supplying any optical power. It comprises of three mutually perpendicular
mirrors of gold-coated polysilicon. The CCR has the property that any incident
ray of light is reflected back to the source (provided that it is incident
within a certain range of angles centered about the cube’s body diagonal).If
one of the mirrors is misaligned , this retro reflection property is spoiled.
The micro fabricated CCR contains an electrostatic actuator that can deflect
one of the mirrors at kilohertz rate. It has been demonstrated that a CCR
illuminated by an external light source can transmit back a modulated signal at
kilobits per second. Since the dust mote itself does not emit light , passive
transmitter consumes little power. Using a microfabricated CCR, data
transmission at a bit rate upto 1 kilobit per second and upto a range of 150 mts
,using a 5 milliwattt illuminating laser is possible.
It should be emphasized that CCR based passive
optical links require an uninterrupted line of sight. The CCR based transmitter
is highly directional. A CCR can transmit to the BTS only when the CCR body
diagonal happens to point directly towards the BTS, within a few tens of
degrees. A passive transmitter can be made more omnidirectional by employing
several CCRs, oriented in different directions, at the expense of increased
dust mote size.
Core Functionality Specification
Choose the case of military base monitoring
wherein on the order of a thousand Smart Dust motes are deployed outside a base
by a micro air vehicle to monitor vehicle movement. The motes can be used to
determine when vehicles were moving, what type of vehicle it was, and possibly
how fast it was travelling. The motes may contain sensors for vibration, sound,
light, IR, temperature, and magnetization. CCRs will be used for transmission,
so communication will only be between a base station and the motes, not between
motes. A typical operation for this scenario would be to acquire data, store it
for a day or two, then upload the data after being interrogated with a laser.
However, to really see what functionality the architecture needed to provide
and how much reconfigurability would be necessary, an exhaustive list of the
potential activities in this scenario was made. The operations that the mote
must perform can be broken down into two categories: those that provoke an
immediate action and those that reconfigure the mote to affect future behavior.
Summary
Smart dust is made up of thousands of
sand-grain-sized sensors that can measure ambient light and temperature. The
sensors -- each one is called a "mote" -- have wireless communications
devices attached to them, and if you put a bunch of them near each other,
they'll network themselves automatically.
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