DocumentCode
72541
Title
Optimized Energy-Aware Wireless System for Identification of the Relative Positioning of Articulated Systems in the Free Space
Author
Bertacchini, Alessandro ; Napoletano, Giacomantonio ; Dondi, Denis ; Larcher, Luca ; Pavan, Paolo
Author_Institution
Dipt. di Sci. e Metodi dell´Ing., Univ. of Modena & Reggio Emilia, Reggio Emilia, Italy
Volume
14
Issue
5
fYear
2014
fDate
May-14
Firstpage
1682
Lastpage
1692
Abstract
In this paper, a low-cost solution to identify the relative positioning of articulated systems in the free space is presented. To prove the effectiveness of the proposed solution, the system has been applied to a real case study of a tractor connected with a baler. Differently from other solutions, the implemented system can monitor the working conditions of the whole machinery while warning the driver when the machinery gets into a dangerous situation. The system is comprised of two wireless devices called Wireless Master Device (WMD) and Wireless End Device (WED) installed on the tractor and on the baler, respectively. To identify instantaneously the dangerous working conditions, each of the two wireless devices exploits a MEMS inertial sensor measuring 3-D linear accelerations and 3-D magnetic fields components integrated in the devices. Very low power consumption has been obtained by exploiting a hardware-software codesign approach implementing an optimized algorithm combined with a smart task manager. Furthermore, a vibrational energy harvester has been designed and integrated on the WED in order to make the device autonomous from an energetic point of view.
Keywords
agricultural machinery; energy harvesting; microsensors; wireless sensor networks; 3D linear accelerations; 3D magnetic fields components; MEMS inertial sensor; articulated systems; free space; hardware software codesign; low power consumption; optimized energy aware wireless system; relative positioning; smart task manager; tractor; vibrational energy harvester; wireless end device; wireless master device; Agricultural machinery; Employee welfare; Power demand; Sensors; Vehicles; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks; Relative positioning identification; energy harvesting circuits; hardware-software co-design; pre-crash safety; wireless embedded systems;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Sensors Journal, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1530-437X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSEN.2014.2302214
Filename
6719544
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