Best Master’s Thesis in ICT 2019 (Supervised by Prof. Linga Reddy Cenkeramaddi and Prof. Professor Magne Arild Hauglund)

Best Master’s Thesis in ICT 2019 (Supervised by Prof. Linga Reddy Cenkeramaddi and Prof. Professor Magne Arild Hauglund)

Master Thesis: “Design and implementation of wake-up radios for long-range wireless IoT devices”

Best master thesis in ICT 2019 (Student and Professor).

Master Student Anders Frøytlog, did his Master’s Thesis under the main supervision of Professor Linga Reddy Cenkeramaddi and co-supervision of Professor Magne Arild Hauglund. The project task is defined by Assoc. Prof. Linga Reddy Cenkeramaddi. The solutions (especially DC-MAC protocol along with wakeup radio) proposed in the thesis greatly reduce the power consumption in long-range wireless IoT devices. A summary of the thesis can be found below.

Summary of the thesis: As the development within Internet of things (IoT) increases rapidly and the market starts to utilize its potential, an enormous effort is being made in both academia and industry to optimize solutions according to the market demands. The demands vary from case to case and some of them include high data rate, long battery lifetime, low latency, and long-range/area coverage depending on application scenarios. The numerous use cases and demands for IoT resulted in various IoT technologies.

System overview: Design and implementation of wake-up radios for long-range wireless IoT devices.

In many IoT applications, especially Wireless IoT applications, energy efficiency and battery lifetime are the most important performance metrics. The wireless access mechanisms used in current technologies utilize Duty-cycling (DC) to reduce power consumption. DC allows a node to turn the radio on and off in specific intervals in order to reduce power consumption. These DC-MAC protocols suffer from overhearing, idle listening, or unnecessary transmission of advertisement packets. The different protocols may also include long delay time caused by the inactive period in the MAC protocol. The recent research and development of Wake-up Radios (WuRs) address some of these problems. A WuR is a simple low-power radio receiver that always listens to the channel to detect a Wake-up Call (WuC). A wake-up radio receiver (WuRx) is attached to the main radio which is always OFF, except when it is supposed to send data. The WuRx and the main radio (MR) are two parts of an IoT node. The use of WuRx eliminates the unnecessary power consumption caused by idle listening and reduces the overhearing consumption as well as the latency. Many articles have been published about WuRs. However, most of the current WuR solutions focus on short-range applications. The objective of this thesis is to design a WuRx for long-range applications (10km to 15km range), implement a WuRx and evaluate the results and compare them to existing solutions.