Recent years have witnessed the wide adoption of the radio-frequency identification (RFID) technology in many important application domains including
logistics, inventory, retailing, public transportation, and security. Though
RFID tags (transponders) can be passive, the high power consumption of
RFID readers (interrogators) has become a critical issue as handheld and mobile readers are increasingly available in pervasive computing environments.
Moreover, high transmission power aggravates interference, complicating the
deployment and operation of RFID systems. In this thesis, we present an
energy-effcient RFID inventory algorithm called Automatic Power Stepping
(APS). The design of APS is based on extensive empirical study on passive tags, and takes into consideration several important details such as tag
response states and variable slot lengths. APS dynamically estimates the
number of tags to be read, incrementally adjusts power level to use suffcient
but not excessive power for communication, and consequently reduces both
the energy consumption for reading a set of tags and the possibility of collisions. We design APS to be compatible with the current Class-1 Generation-2
RFID standards and hence a reader running APS can interact with existing commercial tags without modification. We have implemented APS both on
the NI RFID testing platform and in a high-fidelity simulator. The evaluation shows that APS can save more than 60% energy used by RFID readers,
while maintaining the satisfying performance.
| Date of Award | 4 Oct 2010 |
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| Original language | English |
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| Awarding Institution | - City University of Hong Kong
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| Supervisor | Jianping WANG (Supervisor), Guoliang XING (Supervisor) & Xiaohua JIA (Co-supervisor) |
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- Energy conservation
- Radio frequency identification systems
Negotiate power and performance in the reality of RFID systems
XU, X. (Author). 4 Oct 2010
Student thesis: Master's Thesis