English

Routing for Intermittently-Powered Sensing Systems

Networking and Internet Architecture 2023-08-17 v2

Abstract

Recently, intermittent computing (IC) has received tremendous attention due to its high potential in perpetual sensing for Internet-of-Things (IoT). By harvesting ambient energy, battery-free devices can perform sensing intermittently without maintenance, thus significantly improving IoT sustainability. To build a practical intermittently-powered sensing system, efficient routing across battery-free devices for data delivery is essential. However, the intermittency of these devices brings new challenges, rendering existing routing protocols inapplicable. In this paper, we propose RICS, the first-of-its-kind routing scheme tailored for intermittently-powered sensing systems. RICS features two major designs, with the goal of achieving low-latency data delivery on a network built with battery-free devices. First, RICS incorporates a fast topology construction protocol for each IC node to establish a path towards the sink node with the least hop count. Second, RICS employs a low-latency message forwarding protocol, which incorporates an efficient synchronization mechanism and a novel technique called pendulum-sync to avoid the time-consuming repeated node synchronization. Our evaluation based on an implementation in OMNeT++ and comprehensive experiments with varying system settings show that RICS can achieve orders of magnitude latency reduction in data delivery compared with the baselines.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2305.12550,
  title  = {Routing for Intermittently-Powered Sensing Systems},
  author = {Gaosheng Liu and Lin Wang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2305.12550},
  year   = {2023}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T10:40:38.921Z