Energy autonomous sensor systems: Towards a ubiquitous sensor technology

Autor: M. Belleville, M. J. M. Pelgrom, C. Van Hoof, Paolo Fiorini, P. Nicole, H. Fanet, Eugenio Cantatore, C. Piguet, Marco Tartagni, Robert Hahn, Ruud Vullers
Přispěvatelé: Publica, Integrated Circuits, Emerging Technologies, M. Belleville, H. Fanet, P. Fiorini, P. Nicole, M. J. M. Pelgrom, C. Piguet, R. Hahn, C. VanHoof, R.Vuller, M. Tartagni, E. Cantatore
Rok vydání: 2010
Předmět:
Engineering
Energy budgets
Electronic systems
HOL - Holst
High Tech Systems & Materials
Integrated circuit
Data converter
Data conversion
law.invention
Data converters
Ubiquitous sensor
Microelectronics
law
Working groups
Electronic engineering
Energy autonomous systems
Harvesting
SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy
Electronics
Electronic functions
Operational life
TS - Technical Sciences
Energy recovery
Industrial Innovation
Power converters
Energy harvesting
Sensors
business.industry
Energy scavenging
General Engineering
Electrical engineering
Ultra-low power
Mechatronics
Mechanics & Materials

computer.file_format
Miniaturized electronics
Converters
Autonomous systems
Battery technology
Energy efficiency
visual_art
Electronic component
visual_art.visual_art_medium
Autonomous sensors
business
computer
SDG 7 – Betaalbare en schone energie
Efficient energy use
Zdroj: Microelectronics Journal, 11, 41, 740-745
Microelectronics Journal, 41(11), 740-745. Elsevier
ISSN: 0026-2692
DOI: 10.1016/j.mejo.2010.01.009
Popis: Energy efficiency of electronic systems has emerged as one of the most important trends in integrated circuits research in recent years. The results of this continued effort are visible in all kinds of electronic functions: DSPs (reaching the 10 μW/MMAC according Gene's law), data converters (the FOM of recent ADCs is approaching 15 fJ/conversion step [1] (Liu et al., 2010)), power converters (reaching unprecedented efficiencies in ultra-low-power regime) and radios (achieving an energy budget lower than 1 nJ per received-transmitted bit [2,3] (Daly et al., 2010; Mercier et al., 2008)). Exploiting this continuously improving energy efficiency, the progressing battery technology and advances in energy harvesting, miniaturized electronic sensors that do not need to be recharged for their whole operational life and can communicate among them to build up an energy-autonomous system are possible nowadays. A working group has been set up by CATRENE\1 to study the state and the development of these "energy autonomous systems". This paper summarizes the findings of the working group, expanding and updating in this special issue of the Microelectronics Journal on IWASI09 the report written for the proceedings of the workshop [4] (Belleville et al., 2008). © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Databáze: OpenAIRE