A Review of MIMO Technology for Wireless Sensor Network

DOI : 10.17577/IJERTV2IS120805

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A Review of MIMO Technology for Wireless Sensor Network

Nidhi Parikh*, Jayesh Munjani**

*Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, UKA TARSADIA University

**Assistant Professor, Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, UKA TARSADIA University

Abstract

Wireless sensor network becomes an attractive choice for number of applications because of their multifunctional nature like sensing, computing, and transmitting. But it contains a number of tiny sensor nodes which are operate on small batteries. So the energy consumption of wireless sensor network must be minimized. Also we want high throughput, spectral efficiency and diversity. For these reasons we analyze the efficient modulation schemes and transmission strategies to reduce the energy consumption that needed to transmit the number of bits. This paper Presents an overview of MIMO technique, energy model of MIMO technique and compares the energy consumption of different MIMO schemes.

  1. Introduction

    Wireless sensor network becomes a very hot research topic since last ten years. The building block of such an infrastructure is comprised of hundreds or thousands of small, low cost, low power, multifunctional devices which have the ability to sense, compute and communicate using short range transceivers known as sensor nodes. The interconnection of these nodes forming a network called wireless sensor network (WSN). The evolution of wireless communication and circuit technology has given rise to the development of an infrastructure consists of sensing, computational and communicating units that makes administrator capable to observe, measure and react to a phenomena in a particular environment. Advancement in recent hardware will allow more signal processing functionalities to be integrated in to a single chip. Also the cost of sensors will allow to have a network of

    hundreds or thousands of them , thereby enhancing the reliability and accuracy of data and the area coverage.

    On the other side sensor nodes are powered by small batteries. The low cost, ease of deployment, ad hoc and multifunctional nature has exposed WSNs an attractive choice for numerous applications. But in reality, these networks are comprised of many small battery operated tiny sensor nodes with limited computation capabilities, memory, bandwidth, and hardware that results in resource constrained WSN. The resource constrained nature of WSN creates various challenges in its design and operations degrading its performance. On the other hand, varying numbers of applications having different constraints in their nature makes it further challenging for such resources constrained networks to attain application expectations.

    The MIMO technique has been recently introduced in wireless sensor network. A tiny sensor nodes can be seen as multiple input multiple output (MIMO) system where a sensor nodes may be presented the role of a transmitting or receiving antenna of the MIMO structure. This structure will increase the energy gains for a wireless sensor network, depends on the distance between the transmitter and receiver side of the system. It is proved that above the some specific threshold distance MIMO system will be more energy efficient than SISO approach.

  2. Basics of MIMO

    2.1 System model of MIMO

    An illustration of the MIMO channel can be seen in Figure 1.The MIMO system has Nt transmitting antennas and Nr receiving antennas. In order to describe the MIMO channel, we investigate the channel model at a certain time m. We denote the Nt × 1 vector

    of transmit symbols as s[m] = [s1. . . sNt]T, and the received Nr × 1 vector is

    x[m] = H s[m] + v[m]…………………………..(1)

    Figure-1 System model of MIMO channel

    in(1), v[m] = [v1 . . . vNr]T represents white Gaussian noise, with variance of 2. The channel matrix H is

    11 1

    = . (2)

        1. Multiple input single output

          Figure-4 MISO system model

          MISO is an antenna technology for wireless communications in which multiple antennas are used at the source (transmitter). The destination (receiver) has only one antenna. MISO is one of several forms of smart antenna technology.

        2. Multiple input multiple output

    1

    Here represent the channel coefficient from transmitting antenna j to the receiving antenna i

    2.1 Types of MIMO

        1. Single input single output

          Figure-2 SISO system model

          This type of configuration is the oldest known type of configuration. There is only a single antenna working as a transmitter and a single antenna working as a receiver.

        2. Single input multiple output

    Figure-5 MIMO system model

    Multiple-input and multiple-output, or MIMO is the use of multiple antennas at both the transmitter and receiver to improve communication performance. It is one of several forms of smart antenna technology

  3. Energy model of MIMO

Energy consumption of mimo system will be divided into two main parts

1.Power consumption of all the power amplifiers 2.Power consumption of other circuit blocks

The first term is dependent on the transmit power

, which is calculated from the link budget equation. when the channel experiences a square-law path loss, we have

(4)2

Figure-3 SIMO system model

There is one antenna to transmit and a couple of antennas in the receiver side.Figure-3 shows a basic diagram illustrating one-transmit and two-receive antennas system.

= × 2 (3)

Where represents required energy per bit for BER requirement, represents a bit rate, d is distance between transmitter and receiver, is transmitter antenna gain, is receiver antenna gain, is carrier

wavelength, is the link margin compensating the hardware process variations and other additive background noise or interference, and is the receiver noise figure defined as = ( ), where 0 is

0

the power spectral density of single sided thermal noise

at room temperature and is the power spectral density of total effective noise at the receiver input.The energy consumption of the power amplifiers can be approximated as

= 1 + . . (4)

Where = 1 with is the drain efficiency of RF

power amplifier and is the peak to average ratio

,which is dependent on the modulation scheme and the associated constellation size.

Figure-5 Transmitter circuit blocks

Table-1 Simulation Parameters

= 2.5

= 0.35

= 5

2 = 0 = 174

2

/

B=10KHZ

=1

=30.3 Mw

= 50.0

= 103

= 1

=

= 2.5

= 20

= 10

= 40

  1. Results

    Here we compare four types of mimo technique SISO, MISO, SIMO, and MIMO with and without energy consumption at different distances

    1. For SISO (1×1)

      Figure-6 Receiver circuit blocks

      The second term in total energy consumption will be

      0.014

      0.012

      0.01

      energy ebt

      energy eb

      0.008

      0.006

      0.004

      0.002

      0

      0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50

      distance d

      given by,

      + + + 2 +

      + + + + .. (5)

      Where , , , , , , and

      are the power consumption values for the DAC, the mixer ,the active filters at transmitter side and active filters at receiver side, the low noise amplifier, the intermediate frequency amplifier, the ADC and the frequency synthesizer ,respectively. To estimates the values of , , ,we use the model used in[6].Finally the total energy consumption per bit for a fixed rate system can be obtain by

      Figure-7 energy consumption with and without circuit consumption for SISO (1×1)

    2. For MISO (2×1)

      -3

      x 10

      1

      0.9

      0.8

      0.7

      energy ebt

      energy ebt

      0.6

      0.5

      0.4

      0.3

      0.2

      = ( + )

      . (6)

      0.1

      0

      0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50

      distance d

      The simulation parameters will be given in the below table-1

      Figure-8 energy consumption with and without circuit consumption for MISO(2×1)

      30

      4.5

      4.5

      0.2820

      0.2820

      50

      12.4

      12.4

      0.7523

      0.7833

      30

      4.5

      4.5

      0.2820

      0.2820

      50

      12.4

      12.4

      0.7523

      0.7833

    3. For SIMO (1×2)

      0.014

      0.012

      0.01

      energy ebt

      energy ebt

      0.008

      0.006

      0.004

      0.002

      0

      0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50

      distance d

      Figure-9 energy consumption with and without circuit consumption for SIMO(1×2)

    4. For MIMO (2×2)

      -3

      x 10

      1

      0.9

      0.8

      0.7

      energy ebt

      energy ebt

      0.6

      0.5

      0.4

      0.3

      0.2

      0.1

      0

      0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50

      distance d

      Figure-10 energy consumption with and without energy consumption for MIMO (2×2)

      Energy consumption per bit in millijoule is given in the following tables

      Table-2 Transmission energy per bit with circuit consumption

      Distan ce(in m)

      SISO( 1×1)

      SIMO( 1×2)

      MISO( 2×1)

      MIMO( 2×2)

      10

      0.5

      0.522

      0.57

      0.063

      30

      4.5

      4.5

      0.307

      0.314

      50

      12.4

      12.4

      0.80

      0.815

      Distanc e(in m)

      SISO(1

      ×1)

      SIMO(1

      ×2)

      MISO(2

      ×1)

      MIMO( 2×2)

      10

      0.495

      0.495

      0.0379

      0.03133

      Distanc e(in m)

      SISO(1

      ×1)

      SIMO(1

      ×2)

      MISO(2

      ×1)

      MIMO( 2×2)

      10

      0.495

      0.495

      0.0379

      0.03133

      Table-3 Transmission energy per bit without circuit consumption

  2. Conclusion

From the above results we have conclude that the technique of multiple input multiple output are more energy efficient than the other techniques. If we not consider the circuit energy consumption then the MIMO technique will be more energy efficient.

5. References

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  2. S. Cui, A. Goldsmith and A. Bahai, "Energy-efficiency of MIMO and cooperative MIMO techniques in sensor networks," IEEE J. Select. Areas Communication.vol. 22, pp. 1089, 2004.

  3. Energy-constrained modulation optimization, IEEE Trans. Wireless Communication., 2004. [Online]. Available: http://wsl.stanford.edu/Publications.html, submitted for publication.

  4. J. G. Proakis, Digital Communications, 4th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2000.

  5. T. H. Lee, The Design of CMOS Radio-Frequency Integrated Circuits, Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1998.

  6. S. K. Jayaweera, Virtual MIMO-based cooperative communication for energy-constrained wireless sensor networks, IEEE Trans. Wireless Communication., vol. 5, no. 5,pp.984989,May,2006

  7. Sudharman K. Jayaweera, Energy Analysis of MIMO Techniques in Wire-less Sensor Networks, 38th Annual Conference on Information Sciences and Systems (CISS04), Princeton, NJ, March,2004.

  8. S. Cui, A. J. Goldsmith and A. Bahai, Energy- constrained modulation optimization for coded systems, in IEEE GLOBECOM 2003, vol.1, pp.372-376,2003.

  9. S. Cui, A. J. Goldsmith, and A. Bahai, Energy- constrained Modulation Optimization: IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications (accepted), Sept. 2005.

  10. A. Akyildiz, "A survey on sensor networks," IEEE Communication. Mag., vol. 40, pp. 102-114, Aug 2002

  11. S. Cui, A. J. Goldsmith, and A. Bahai, Modulation optimization under energy constraints at proceedings of ICC03, Alaska, U.S.A, May, 2003.Also available at http://wsl.stanford.edu/Publications.html

  12. X. Li, Energy efficient wireless sensor networks with transmission diversity, IEE Electronics Lett., vol. 39, no. 24, pp.1753-1755, 2003.

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