Energy management for CPS

Chi Harold Liu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

The previous three chapters address different aspects of the architectures of CPS. However, there are various technical challenges in sensor energy and data quality management of CPS. A major one that drives our work involves the large-scale management of heterogeneous devices that are expected to populate CPS systems. A great many sensor types, manufacturers, protocols, etc., are expected to co-exist and hence, any solution must be designed to operate as expected regardless of the device configuration. Regarding energy management, this motivates the need for a universal management approach that attempts to control MAC (medium access control) level energy consumption of nodes, as motivated by previous research [153]. Furthermore, an efficient management scheme should minimize the transmission of control messages crossing different domains, and thus we are seeking a long-term optimal solution. In regard to data quality management, a universal measure of expression can be found in recent work in quality-of-information (QoI) management. Broadly speaking, QoI relates to the ability to judge whether information is fit-for-use for a particular purpose [154, 155, 156]. For the purposes of this chapter, we will assume that QoI is characterized by a number of attributes including accuracy, latency, and physical context (specifically, sensor coverage in this chapter [154]).

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCyber Physical Systems
Subtitle of host publicationArchitectures, Protocols and Applications
PublisherCRC Press
Pages101-130
Number of pages30
ISBN (Electronic)9781482208986
ISBN (Print)9781482208979
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2015

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