DocumentCode
3609026
Title
Energy-Efficiency Analysis of Analog and Digital Compressive Sensing in Wireless Sensors
Author
Bellasi, David E. ; Benini, Luca
Author_Institution
Dept. of Inf. Technol. & Electr. Eng., ETH Zurich, Zürich, Switzerland
Volume
62
Issue
11
fYear
2015
Firstpage
2718
Lastpage
2729
Abstract
Compressive sensing (CS) is a signal acquisition strategy that, based on the assumption of sparsity, promises to relax the design constraints of signal acquisition systems with respect to conventional strategies. In this paper, we contrast signal acquisition systems for low-rate applications based on analog CS encoding with systems based on digital CS encoding. We consider the complete signal chain from acquisition to reconstruction, with particular attention to the effects of quantization, and show that the two schemes differ significantly in encoder precision, measurement resolution, compression ratio, and reconstruction quality. Further, we develop first-order power estimation models to asses the relative energy-efficiency of different CS and conventional signal acquisition systems. Our numerical evaluations suggest that when the power consumption of data storage/communication outweighs the power consumption of data acquisition and processing, analog CS systems can outperform their digital counterparts, despite their higher hardware complexity. Moreover, we provide evidence that the common special case of analog and digital encoding, known as non-uniform sampler, performs best under all conditions.
Keywords
compressed sensing; data compression; encoding; numerical analysis; signal detection; signal reconstruction; wireless sensor networks; analog CS encoding; analog CS systems; analog compressive sensing; complete signal chain; compression ratio; data acquisition; data communication; data processing; data storage; design constraints; digital CS encoding; encoder precision; energy-efficiency analysis; first-order power estimation models; measurement resolution; numerical evaluations; power consumption; reconstruction quality; signal acquisition strategy; sparsity assumption; wireless sensors; Encoding; Hardware; Noise; Noise measurement; Quantization (signal); Sensors; Wireless communication; Compressive sensing (CS); hardware design; non-uniform sampling; power estimation; random modulation; sparse signal acquisition; wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1549-8328
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TCSI.2015.2477579
Filename
7307256
Link To Document