Abstract
A wireless sensor network (WSN) is a system that consists of multiple sensing elements distributed spatially with a specific objective to measure different physical quantities and communicate those measurements between themselves and the central gateway.
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Questions and Exercises
Questions and Exercises
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1.
Describe the typical architecture of a wireless sensor node and its main components. What are the main hardware building blocks?
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2.
Describe the principle of operation of an accelerometer.
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3.
Consider a mass sitting on a nonlinear spring (Fig. 3.29):
Derive dynamic equation that describes the system above. Consider that the spring is nonlinear, meaning \(F_{\text{spring}} = ky^{2}\). Linearize the model around equilibrium point y 0.
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4.
What is the difference between capacitive, piezoresistive, and piezoelectric accelerometer?
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5.
Describe the principle of operation of a pressure sensor.
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6.
What is the difference between piezoresistive and capacitance-based pressure sensors?
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7.
Describe how photodiode works. Draw p–n junction and describe the equilibrium state of electrons and holes across the junction.
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8.
Find a commercial photodiode on the web and get its important parameters from the datasheet such as gain, output current, terminal capacitance, cut-off frequency, etc.
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9.
What is a Hall effect and how magnetometers work based on the Hall effect?
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10.
Describe three types of chemical sensors.
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11.
Derive relationship between an induced voltage and differential surface stress on the cantilever beam. How the cantilever beam operates as a chemical sensor?
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12.
Use the following formula for a pressure sensor where capacitance changes based on the diaphragm deflection as \(C = \int {\int {\frac{\varepsilon }{d - w(r)}r\,{\text{d}}r\,{\text{d}}\theta } }\). Assume that the deflection follows a quadratic function pattern in terms of radial distance from the center of the circle r. Derive expression for capacitance C in terms of r for given dimension of a diaphragm with radius a.
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13.
What is the difference between general-purpose microprocessors and event-driven microprocessors? Describe design advantages in event-driven microprocessors in WSN applications.
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14.
What is the recommended size for the monopole antenna operating in 433, 915 MHz, and 2.4 GHz frequency range?
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15.
If the receiver antenna polarization is not perfectly aligned with the transmitter antenna polarization, calculate the power of the received signal including loss due to difference in polarization planes. Assume the angle between antennas’ polarization is β, distance between sensor nodes is d, power of the transmitting signal is P, and the PLE is α.
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16.
Please describe the concept of sensor network asynchronous processor? What kind of operating system is required in this case?
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17.
Briefly explain how energy utilization may be minimized across the various layers of the WSN protocol stack.
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18.
TDMA, FDMA and CDMA are examples of fixed assignment protocols operating at layer 2 of the WSN protocol stack. Which of these protocols is best suited for a low duty cycle for power management? Briefly explain why.
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19.
Describe the mechanisms of operation of the following WSN transport protocols: CODA, ESRT, and Tiny TCP/IP.
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20.
In your own words, explain the difference between schedule-based and contention-based protocols for WSN media access control. What are the advantages and disadvantages of each in the context of a WSN?
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Selmic, R.R., Phoha, V.V., Serwadda, A. (2016). WSN Architecture. In: Wireless Sensor Networks. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-46769-6_3
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