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Low-power wireless sensor with SNAP and IEEE 1451 Protocol

  • Esensors Inc.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

The availability of low power short range RF transmitters and transceivers in the unlicensed band have made small low-cost, battery operated wireless sensors relatively easy to implement, particularly those employing microcontrollers with sleep modes. To extend access to a wider area, even nationally, and to a variety of sensor requires a standardized sensor network. We believe that the NIST-supported IEEE 1451 smart transducer standard is best suited for this role and in particular the IEEE 1451.5 version (wireless) which was developed for this purpose. However, while the Dot 5 protocol (or Dot 0) works well for moderate to high power devices, it is too verbose for the many low-power wireless sensors because the message size is relatively large, albeit much less than a typical Internet (TCP/IP) message. To reduce the message size, and thus improve the battery life, we employ the SNAP (Scaleable Node Addressable Protocol) format for data and the more concept Dot 4 (IEEE 1451.4) TEDS rather than the Dot 5/Dot 0 protocol. Conversion to the full Dot 0 format is done by the receiver or gateway before transmission on the Internet.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication2008 IEEE Sensors Applications Symposium, SAS-2008 - Proceedings
PublisherIEEE Computer Society
Pages225-227
Number of pages3
ISBN (Print)9781424419630
DOIs
StatePublished - 2008

Publication series

Name2008 IEEE Sensors Applications Symposium, SAS-2008 - Proceedings

Keywords

  • Protocol
  • Sensor
  • TEDS
  • Wireless

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