4.8 Article

Multiple Task Resource Allocation Considering QoS in Energy Harvesting Systems

Journal

IEEE INTERNET OF THINGS JOURNAL
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages 7893-7908

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JIOT.2022.3231869

Keywords

Task analysis; Resource management; Internet of Things; Quality of service; Real-time systems; Prediction algorithms; Multitasking; Energy harvesting (EH); geometry programming; Karush-Kuhn-Tucher (KKT); Lagrangian multiplier determination; multiple-task allocation; Quality of Service (QoS)

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This article focuses on resource allocation in energy harvesting systems for IoT networks, particularly in the context of real-time periodic task allocation with QoS. The authors propose a novel method to allocate energy to slots based on certain constraints, and a separate method to satisfy task executable constraints. Extensive experiments validate the effectiveness of the proposed methods and task framework.
Most approaches to resource allocation in energy harvesting systems for Internet-of-Things (IoT) networks do not consider real-time periodic task allocation with Quality of Service (QoS). This article studies the offline 2-D optimization problem for allocating randomly harvested energy flowing causally between slots into different real-time periodic tasks on an IoT device. We formulate an energy allocation problem, for tasks with different energy costs and requested QoS, which aims to maximize a convex reward function subject to energy causality (EC), energy saturation (ES) and task executable (TE) constraints within a certain length of time. We decouple the optimization problem into two subproblems after analysis. First, we propose a novel method to allocate energy to slots based on the Karush-Kuhn-Tucher conditions only considering the EC & ES constraints. The proposed method outperforms the state-of-the-art Tunnel Policy, based on geometric programming. Next, an adaption is made to satisfy the TE constraints by allocating in the original constant power slots directly without iteratively checking the wasted energy. Finally, the energy already allocated to slots is put into tasks to complete the 2-D allocation. The effectiveness of the proposed methods and task framework are validated by extensive experiments.

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