Smart dust: Monte Carlo simulation of self-organised transport

Category:

Description

Smart dust has been conceived as millimeter scale autonomous systems that form the basis for massively distributed wireless sensor networks according to B. A. Warneke and K. S. J. Pister (2002) and B. A. Warneke and K. S. J. Pister (2004). Smart dust motes have been demonstrated that pack sensors, interfaces, power sources, digital control communications and processing circuitry into a few cubic millimeters volume. The authors address the problem of how to subsequently move dust motes around in their application environment. Solutions involving robot insect motes have been advocated where distances and times are small; but this introduces additional mechanical and electronic complexity plus severe constraints on power sources. Instead, the authors focus on the possibility of extracting power from the natural fluctuating forces that act on the motes.

Additional information

Author

Barker, J., Barmpoutis, A.

Journal

In Proceedings of IWCE04: 10th IEEE International Workshop on Computational Electronics

Year

2004

Month

October 24-27

Pages

182-183

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1109/IWCE.2004.1407387

Citation

Citation

Barker, J. and Barmpoutis, A., 2004. Smart dust: Monte Carlo simulation of self-organised transport. In Proceedings of IWCE04: 10th IEEE International Workshop on Computational Electronics, pp. 182-183. https://doi.org/10.1109/IWCE.2004.1407387

BibTex

@article{digitalWorlds:177,
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1109/IWCE.2004.1407387},
author = {Barker, J. and Barmpoutis, A.},
title = {Smart dust: Monte Carlo simulation of self-organised transport},
journal = {In Proceedings of IWCE04: 10th IEEE International Workshop on Computational Electronics},
month = {October 24-27},
year = {2004},
pages = {182-183}
}