Title :
Energy Efficient Medium Access Protocol for Wireless Medical Body Area Sensor Networks
Author :
Omeni, O. ; Wong, A. ; Burdett, A.J. ; Toumazou, C.
Author_Institution :
Toumaz Technol. Ltd., Abingdon
Abstract :
This paper presents a novel energy-efficient MAC Protocol designed specifically for wireless body area sensor networks (WBASN) focused towards pervasive healthcare applications. Wireless body area networks consist of wireless sensor nodes attached to the human body to monitor vital signs such as body temperature, activity or heart-rate. The network adopts a master-slave architecture, where the body-worn slave node periodically sends sensor readings to a central master node. Unlike traditional peer-to-peer wireless sensor networks, the nodes in this biomedical WBASN are not deployed in an ad hoc fashion. Joining a network is centrally managed and all communications are single-hop. To reduce energy consumption, all the sensor nodes are in standby or sleep mode until the centrally assigned time slot. Once a node has joined a network, there is no possibility of collision within a cluster as all communication is initiated by the central node and is addressed uniquely to a slave node. To avoid collisions with nearby transmitters, a clear channel assessment algorithm based on standard listen-before-transmit (LBT) is used. To handle time slot overlaps, the novel concept of a wakeup fallback time is introduced. Using single-hop communication and centrally controlled sleep/wakeup times leads to significant energy reductions for this application compared to more ldquoflexiblerdquo network MAC protocols such as 802.11 or Zigbee. As duty cycle is reduced, the overall power consumption approaches the standby power. The protocol is implemented in hardware as part of the Sensiumtrade system-on-chip WBASN ASIC, in a 0.13- mum CMOS process.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; access protocols; application specific integrated circuits; biomedical electronics; biomedical telemetry; channel allocation; client-server systems; frequency hop communication; health care; patient monitoring; system-on-chip; wireless sensor networks; ASIC; CMOS process; MAC protocol; Sensium; body-worn slave node; channel assessment algorithm; energy efficient medium access protocol; human body monitoring; listen-before-transmit; master-slave architecture; pervasive healthcare; single-hop communication; system-on-chip; wakeup fallback time; wireless medical body area sensor network; wireless sensor nodes; Access protocols; Biosensors; Energy consumption; Energy efficiency; Master-slave; Media Access Protocol; Peer to peer computing; Temperature sensors; Wireless application protocol; Wireless sensor networks; Hardware MAC; MAC Protocol; wireless body area sensor network; wireless sensor networks;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2008.2003431