4.8 Article

Predictive Power Management for Internet of Battery-Less Things

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER ELECTRONICS
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 299-312

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TPEL.2017.2664098

Keywords

Energy harvesting; internet of battery-less thing (IoBT); power management

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation within the Division of Computer and Network Systems [CNS-1253390]
  2. National Science Foundation of China-Joint Research Fund for Overseas Chinese Scholars and Scholars in Hong Kong and Macao [61628303]
  3. Division Of Computer and Network Systems
  4. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [1253390] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Energy harvesting technology provides a promising solution to enable internet of battery-less things (IoBT), as the lifetime and size of batteries become major limiting factors in the design and effective operation of internet of things (IoT). However, with constrained energy buffer size, the variation of ambient energy availability and wireless communication cast adverse effect on the operation of IoBT. There is a pressing demand for developing IoBT-specialized power management. In this paper, we propose a novel predictive power management (PPM) framework combining optimal working point, deviation aware predictive energy allocation, and energy efficient transmission power control. The optimal working point guarantees minimum power loss of IoBT systems. By predictively budgeting the available energy and using the optimal working point as a set-point, PPM mitigates the prediction error so that both power failure time and system power loss is minimized. The transmission power control module of PPM improves energy efficiency by dynamically selecting optimal transmission power level with minimum energy consumption. Real-world harvesting profiles are tested to validate the effectiveness of PPM. The results indicate that compared with the previous predictive power managers, PPM incurs up to 17.49% reduction in system power loss and 93.88% less power failure time while maintaining a high energy utilization rate. PPM also achieves 9.4% to 23.22% of maximum improvement of transmission energy efficiency compared with the state-of-the-art transmission power control schemes.

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