Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - (Page 18) 18 WIRELESS SENSORS Startup eyes battery-free wireless sensor nets By John Walko o wires and no batteries; that’s the promise of a company at the recent ISA Expo in Houston, Texas with a battery-free solution for ultralow-power wireless sensor and control networks based on the IEEE 802.15.4 standard. The target, according to GreenPeak Technologies (Utrecht, Netherlands), is to leverage three key technologies and develop chips and modules for sensor applications that would operate without power cabling or batteries. The requisite technologies are an ultralow-power wireless transceiver and sensor interface design with efficient power-up and power-down modes that dramatically reduce power consumption; an energy-harvesting interface that lets the modules use power provided by external solar, electromagnetic and piezoelectric transducers; and a mesh technology that lets designers create extended sensor networks without the need for battery-powered or cabled routing nodes. The company said its mesh technology is self-healing and self-forming, making the approach easy and inexpensive to install. And each device in the GreenPeak network can act as a repeater for other wireless devices, letting the network span larger distances. Unlike competitive mesh solutions, which require battery power or cabling for the main routing nodes, GreenPeak networks tap smart power-up/powerdown and synchronization techniques that enable all mesh nodes to operate in low-power mode. Its name may be new, but GreenPeak’s roots go back a couple of years to the formation of Xanadu Wireless BV, a venturecapital-backed fabless chip group formed to develop IP, chips and modules for the wireless-sensor market. Xanadu’s relaunch as GreenPeak followed its July purchase of Ubiwave NV (Zele, Belgium), a startup focusing on related ZigBee-type devices for monitoring and control sensor networks, for an undisclosed sum. GreenPeak’s co-founder and CEO, Cees Links, helped pioneer wireless-LAN technology while at such companies as NCR, AT&T, Lucent and Agere, and is a founding member of the IEEE 802.11 Working Group and the Wi-Fi Alliance. “ZigBee-type sensor networks are clearly the ‘third wave’ N GreenPeak technology maximises system integration while minimizing power consumption, complexity, size and cost. of wireless, but we have a fundamental problem: The elimination of wires really needs to go hand-in-hand with taking the maintenance issue associated with batteries out of the equation,” said Links. “Otherwise, people will just not buy into this. Half a solution is no solution.” Links said GreenPeak is sampling its low-power communications technology as a Lime module – an electronic component less than 5 cm2 that OEM customers can integrate into their products. The standalone comms system integrates a transmitter/ receiver, antenna and lowpower mesh network software. It also features a transmit power amplifier that, according to Links, delivers four times the transmission range of nonamplified products without adversely affecting power requirements. The module’s software can be configured to manage the power of various energyharvesting devices, though Links said the company does not do energy harvesting as such. He added that the package meets the requirements of ZigBee-Pro 2007, the latest version of the standard, which he expects the ZigBee Alliance to send out for balloting soon. OEMs will also be able to add their own applications to the module, eliminating the need for an external processor and thereby lowering total system cost. A starter kit and development suite are available that include graphical network visualization and control panel source code. GreenPeak is already working on an integrated device that would incorporate all functions of the current module, and it is developing a full tool chain to support OEM integration. Links acknowledged that various other companies are offering some of the four elements (the three noted above, plus standards compliance) needed for developing wireless sensor networks, but said none has the full slate of capabilities. “And some of these companies are [just] talking about it or thinking about it,” he said. He said he doesn’t think GreenPeak will compete with established players in the ZigBee or 802.15.4 space, such as Texas Instruments, Freescale Semiconductor or Ember Corp. “We are coming at this from a different perspective – focusing on end nodes – and not as a means to sell unit volumes of microcontrollers or processors,” Links said. Nevertheless, GreenPeak’s target markets are the same as for other members of the ZigBee Alliance: home automation, building automation, asset management, health care, and safety and security. GreenPeak Technologies’ first product – the GP-08 Lime module. Company Information GreenPeak Technologies www.greenpeak.com Microwave Engineering Europe ● November 2007 ● www.mwee.com 018_MWEE.indd 18 26/10/07 17:38:31 http://www.greenpeak.com http://www.mwee.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 Contents News Comment Metamaterials: Metamaterials Tackle Communications Wavelengths Microwave Components — EM tools: Microwave Component Design Easier With New EM and EDA Tools Cover Feature: RF Testing for OFDMA in LTE Base-Stations Startup Eyes Battery-Free Wireless Sensor Nets High-speed ADC Technology Paves the Way for Software Defined Radios Planning a WiMAX network: Maximising the ROI by Using Advanced Optimisation Tools Transporting Video Over Wireless Networks Ultrawideband Under the Gun Specifying the Proper SAW Filter Products Product Feature: RF Test Solution Supports Emerging 4x4 MIMO as Well as Multiple Commercial Standards Calendar Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 (Page Cover1) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 (Page Cover2) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 (Page 3) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - News (Page 4) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - News (Page 5) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - News (Page 6) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Contents (Page 7) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Contents (Page 8) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Comment (Page 9) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Comment (Page 10) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Comment (Page 11) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Metamaterials: Metamaterials Tackle Communications Wavelengths (Page 12) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Microwave Components — EM tools: Microwave Component Design Easier With New EM and EDA Tools (Page 13) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Microwave Components — EM tools: Microwave Component Design Easier With New EM and EDA Tools (Page 14) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Microwave Components — EM tools: Microwave Component Design Easier With New EM and EDA Tools (Page 15) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Cover Feature: RF Testing for OFDMA in LTE Base-Stations (Page 16) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Cover Feature: RF Testing for OFDMA in LTE Base-Stations (Page 17) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Startup Eyes Battery-Free Wireless Sensor Nets (Page 18) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Startup Eyes Battery-Free Wireless Sensor Nets (Page 19) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - High-speed ADC Technology Paves the Way for Software Defined Radios (Page 20) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - High-speed ADC Technology Paves the Way for Software Defined Radios (Page 21) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - High-speed ADC Technology Paves the Way for Software Defined Radios (Page 22) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - High-speed ADC Technology Paves the Way for Software Defined Radios (Page 23) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Planning a WiMAX network: Maximising the ROI by Using Advanced Optimisation Tools (Page 24) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Planning a WiMAX network: Maximising the ROI by Using Advanced Optimisation Tools (Page 25) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Planning a WiMAX network: Maximising the ROI by Using Advanced Optimisation Tools (Page 26) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Planning a WiMAX network: Maximising the ROI by Using Advanced Optimisation Tools (Page 27) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Transporting Video Over Wireless Networks (Page 28) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Transporting Video Over Wireless Networks (Page 29) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Transporting Video Over Wireless Networks (Page 30) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Ultrawideband Under the Gun (Page 31) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Specifying the Proper SAW Filter (Page 32) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Specifying the Proper SAW Filter (Page 33) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Products (Page 34) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Products (Page 35) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Products (Page 36) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Products (Page 37) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Products (Page 38) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Products (Page 39) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Product Feature: RF Test Solution Supports Emerging 4x4 MIMO as Well as Multiple Commercial Standards (Page 40) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Product Feature: RF Test Solution Supports Emerging 4x4 MIMO as Well as Multiple Commercial Standards (Page 41) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Calendar (Page 42) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Calendar (Page Cover3) Microwave Engineering Europe - November 2007 - Calendar (Page Cover4)
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