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VEH-COM: Demodulating vibration energy harvesting for short range communication
This paper investigates the possibility of using a vibration energy harvesting (VEH) device as a communication receiver. By modulating the ambient vibration energy using a transmitting speaker, and demodulating the harvested power at the receiving VEH, we aim to transmit small amounts of data at low...
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
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Format: | Conference Proceeding |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Request full text |
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Summary: | This paper investigates the possibility of using a vibration energy harvesting (VEH) device as a communication receiver. By modulating the ambient vibration energy using a transmitting speaker, and demodulating the harvested power at the receiving VEH, we aim to transmit small amounts of data at low rates between two proximate devices. The key advantage of using VEH as a receiver is that the modulated sound waves can be successfully demodulated directly from the harvested power without employing the power-consuming digital signal processing (DSP), which makes a VEH receiver significantly more power efficient than a conventional microphone-based decoder. To address the extremely narrow bandwidth of VEH, we design a simple ON-OFF keying modulation, but optimized for VEH hardware. Experiments with a real VEH device shows that, at a distance of 2 cm, a laptop speaker with the proposed modulation scheme can achieve 30 bps communication for a target bit error rate of less than 1%, which would enable many emerging short range applications, such as mobile payment. The communication range of a laptop can be extended to 80 cm for 5 bps, allowing a range of other audio-based device-to-device communications, such as a web advertisement on a laptop browser transferring tokens to a nearby smartphone. We also demonstrate that the proposed VEH-based sound decoding is resilient to background noise, thanks to its extremely narrow power harvesting bandwidth, which works as a natural noise filter. |
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ISSN: | 2474-249X |
DOI: | 10.1109/PERCOM.2017.7917863 |