Wirelessly Powered Sensor Networks and Computational RFID
The Wireless Identification and Sensing Platform (WISP) is the first of a new class of RF-powered sensing and computing systems.� Rather than being powered by batteries, these sensor systems are powered by radio waves that are either deliberately broadcast or ambient.� Enabled by ongoing exponential...
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Format: | Electronic |
Language: | English |
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New York, NY :
Springer New York : Imprint: Springer,
2013.
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Online Access: | https://ezaccess.library.uitm.edu.my/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-6166-2 |
Table of Contents:
- Preface
- Range Scaling of Wirelessly Powered Sensor Systems
- History of the WISP Program
- The Wireless Identification and Sensing Platform
- System-On-Chip WISP: A 9 micro-Amp, Addressable Gen 2 Sensor Tag for BioSignal Acquisition
- Battery-less wireless sensors based on low power UHF RFID tags
- Passive RFID-based Wake-up Radios for Wireless Sensor Networks
- BAT: Backscatter Anything-to-Tag Communication
- Implementing the Gen 2 MAC on the Intel WISP
- WISP Monitoring and Debugging
- Maximalist Cryptography and Computation on the WISP UHF RFID Tag
- Security Enhanced WISPs: Implementation Challenges
- Power Optimized Waveforms That Enhance the Range of Energy Harvesting Sensors
- Wireless Ambient Radio Power
- Powering a VAD using the portable FREED System
- PORFIDO: Using neutrino telescopes and RFID to gather oceanographic data
- RFID-Vox: a Tribute to Leon Theremin.