Innovative Low Power Multiradio Sensing and Control Device for
Non-Intrusive Occupancy Monitoring
Marco De Donno and Brendan O’Flynn
Tyndall National Institute, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland
Keywords: Smart Sensing, Low Power Consumption, Building Energy Management (BEM), Multiradio Systems,
Multisensing Systems, Internet of Things.
Abstract: New tools and methodologies to reduce the gap between predicted and actual energy performances at the level
of buildings and blocks of buildings are in continuous development in academic and industry organizations.
The development of Wireless Sensor Networking (WSN) technology plays a core role in this field since their
development enables the monitoring and control of application within the building environment. In this paper
the development of a low power consumption multiradio and multisensing system to monitor building
conditions and enable the interaction of occupants with devices through embedded actuators is described. The
device (named NOD) incorporates a 32-bit ARM-Cortex microcontroller, a variety of sensors to monitor the
ambient conditions – luminance, temperature, humidity, air quality - and multiple radio interfaces -
WiFi/Bluetooth LE/868MHz. The NOD is intended to be used as a desktop device with a dedicated user
interface. A description of the system and its features and functionalities is provided.
1 INTRODUCTION
With the increasing demand for more energy efficient
buildings (Laustsen, 2008), the construction and
energy services industries are faced with the challenge
of ensuring that the energy performance and savings
predicted during energy efficiency measures
definition is actually achieved during operation. There
is, however, significant evidence to suggest that
buildings underperform. A, so called, “performance
gap” which is attributed to a variety of causal factors
related to both predicted and in-use performance,
implying that predictions tend to be unrealistically low
whilst actual energy performance is usually
unnecessarily high (MOEEBIUS, 2016).
It is also important to monitor the air quality in
offices environments and take actions to improve it.
Poor indoor air quality can reduce the performance of
office work by 6-9% and these negative effects on
performance are accompanied by general symptoms
such as headache and concentration (Wyon, 2004).
Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) systems are
becoming an increasingly popular technology that is
used today in a myriad of applications such as
Building Energy Management (BEM), Smart Homes,
Home Area Networking (HAN), smart cities and
environmental monitoring applications.
New architectures are required to offer improved
inter-operability, to improve the reliability of data
communications and to address the spread spectrum
requirements associated with next generation sensor
systems through the development of smart radio
systems. Currently, available platforms exist that have
multiple radios but these tend to operate in a single
Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM) band
(typically 2.4GHz) – and not in combination with the
868MHz ISM Band, which is ideal for the built
environment due to its long range of transmission and
low data rate communication properties (O’Flynn,
2016). The use of a wireless sensing system reduces
the total cost of the network installation compared to
traditional wired sensing systems which ranges from
40 to $2000 per linear foot of wiring (Feng Zhao,
Leonidas and Guibas, 2004).
The WSN group in TYNDALL is participating in
“MOEEBIUS – Modelling Optimization of Energy
Efficiency in Buildings for Urban Sustainability”, a
project funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020
research and innovation programme. MOEEBIUS
introduces a Holistic Energy Performance
Optimization Framework that enhances current
De Donno, M. and O’Flynn, B.
Innovative Low Power Multiradio Sensing and Control Device for Non-Intrusive Occupancy Monitoring.
DOI: 10.5220/0006692601730181
In Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems (SMARTGREENS 2018), pages 173-181
ISBN: 978-989-758-292-9
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
173
(passive and active building elements) modelling
approaches and delivers innovative simulation tools
which deeply grasp and describe real-life building
operation complexities in accurate simulation
predictions that significantly reduce the
“performance gap” and enhance multi-fold,
continuous optimization of building energy
performance as a means to further mitigate and
reduce the identified “performance gap” in real-time
or through retrofitting of appropriate sensing
technology (Launsten, 2008).
To enable this, the MOEEBIUS NOD has been
developed as a hardware device to monitor building
context conditions and further enable the interaction
of occupants with devices through embedded
actuators.
Section 1 of this paper introduces the subject
matter, the application space and the objective of this
work within the project. Section 2 reports the state of
the art in current wireless sensing system technologies
for indoor air quality monitoring and multiradio
platforms. Section 3 describes the “NOD” developed
within the project. Section 4 describes the
configuration and the operational mode of the device.
Section 5 investigates power consumption
characteristics of the platform. Section 6 concludes the
work and outlines some directions for future work and
research in this area.
2 PREVIOUS WORKS
A variety of wireless sensors systems are available and
are continuously under development using different
communication standards, proprietary and non-
proprietary, such as ZigBee, IEEE 802.15x and
Bluetooth. The use of one protocol instead of the other
carries some advantages but also some disadvantages.
Indoor range of transmission above the GHz
frequency is quite limited especially for indoor
applications with dense obstacles that will cause
interference (Harwood, 2009). The Wi-Fi technology
overcomes those issues by using higher transmission
power (up to 100 times higher than ZigBee/802.15.4),
which is of course not suitable for battery powered
systems in low power WSN systems (O’Flynn, 2016).
A number of the currently available systems for
indoor air quality are reported here as well as a
selection of multiradio platform currently in use in
such systems.
The “M-POD” (Jiang, 2011) is the portable IAQ
sensing device wireless embedded sensing,
computation, and communication device based on the
Arduino BT (Figure 1.a). It is capable of sensing the
concentrations of a number of air pollutants and either
storing these data or transmitting them to nearby
smartphones via its Bluetooth interface. The M-pod
has a humidity sensor, light sensor, two temperature
sensors – one upstream to measure ambient air
temperature and the other downstream to measure the
temperature near the sensors, a CO2 sensor, and low-
cost metal oxide gas sensors. The battery lifespan is
approximately 5.5 hours if an M-pod is continuously
on and greater than 24 hours when in low-power
mode.
The “AirSense” (Fang, 2011) is a IAQ sensing
platform developed to use with the Arduino Uno
Ethernet board. The platform has three onboard
sensors including temperature, humidity and VOCs
sensors (Figure 1.b) and is enclosed in a 3D printed
case. The sampled sensor data are transmitted to the
cloud server via the onboard Ethernet port. Besides the
onboard sensors, AirSense also incorporates a
standalone consumer-grade Particulate Matter (PM)
sensor DC1700 from Dylos (AQMD, 2015) to
measure the concentration of indoor PM 2.5.
The “Authentic” board (O’Flynn, 2016) (Figure
1.c) is a Multiradio Sensing Systems for Home Area
Networking and Building Management based on a 32-
bit microcontroller, incorporating temperature and
light sensors and three radio modules
(ZigBee/6LoWPAN, Bluetooth LE, 868MHz). The
configurability of the system can increase the range
between single sensor points and can enable the
implementation of adaptive networking architectures
of different configurations (O’Flynn, 2016). The
system needs an external gateway in order to send the
data to internet.
The BtNode V3 (BTNODE, 2007) (Figure 1.d) is
a platform with two radios onboard. It incorporates a
Chipcon CC1000 low power radio (433-915 MHz)
and also has an additional ZV4002 Bluetooth radio
(2.4 GHz).
The Wasp Mote (LIBELIUM, 2017) is a platform
tha has separate 868 and 900MHz radio modular plug-
in boards, but only a single radio module can be
operated at a time and true multi-radio operation is not
feasible.
The NOD device described in this publication can
be also used as repeater increasing the range of the
network. Moreover it offers the possibility to interact
with the user through buttons and display or an
Android Application for maintenance or data
visualization.
SMARTGREENS 2018 - 7th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems
174
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Figure 1: Multiradio systems: a) M-POD b) AirSense c)
Authentic board d) BtNode V3 e)Wasp Mote.
3 SYSTEM IMPLEMENTATION
The Nod is a desktop device which senses human
presence, ambient temperature and humidity, air
quality and light conditions in the user’s vicinity and
communicates these parameters wirelessly to a
gateway. The Nod device also provides an intuitive
and easy to use interface with feedback that allows a
user to input and send commands to the Building
management layer through a gateway to control the
ambient environment in order to maximize user
comfort. The latency (delay) is in the order of
milliseconds and is not apparent to the user.
A specification process was undertaken with
consortium partners from industry and academia to
identify the core requirements associated with a
wireless system for deployment in offices. Technical
features which were assessed and considered
included: functionality requirements as regards
actuation and control, quality of service, latency,
number and types of sensors/meters and interfaces,
programming methods (wireless/non wireless), power
supplies/energy harvesting compatibility, radio
frequency band, standards/non standards
communications and data transmission range.
Figure 2: MOEEBIUS NOD Platform.
The platform described in the following sections
of this paper is a novel low power consumption
multiradio and multisensing system based on a 32-bit
ARM-Cortex-M4 microcontroller, incorporating
multiple radio interfaces - Bluetooth
LE/868MHz/WiFi - to provide increased connectivity
in deployment, and potentially reduce the interference
impact on the network as the system can hop from
ISM band to ISM band automatically. It also includes
sensors for detecting human presence, ambient
Innovative Low Power Multiradio Sensing and Control Device for Non-Intrusive Occupancy Monitoring
175
temperature, humidity, air quality and light conditions
in the user’s vicinity (~5m) in a 360° field of view.
The network of NOD devices adopts a
standardized wireless mesh topology, architecture and
information flow (to overcome deployment site
obstacles, such as walls in indoor environments, and
maximize communication reliability). The selection of
the network topology takes into account the building
types and installations and the maximum distance
from the gateway.
The NOD can receive user inputs via an intuitive
and easy to use interface. The users will be able to set
control settings on the different device types (HVAC
and lighting) and further receive information about the
current status of each device through a custom
designed user interface.
Figure 3: Block diagram of the NOD platform.
The final embedded system was designed around
10x10cm size (shown in Figure 3) and deployed in
offices for preliminary tests and characterization. The
main components of the NOD are the following.
Microcontroller: The heart of the system is the
STM32F303ZET6, a 32-bit ARM Cortex M4 Core,
72MHz Maximum, 512KB flash, 64KB RAM, USB
2.0 (ST, 2016).
Sensors:
- Proximity and Light sensor (VCNL4020)
(Vishay, 2014) interfaced to the
microcontroller via I2C and which can detect
proximity within 20cm. It is also able to
sensing light level in the range 0.25lux
16klux. It has also an interrupt function that
will pull down the interrupt pin when the
sensor detects the presence within the set
threshold (20cm). This functionality will be
used to activate the screen of the NOD when
the device is in sleep mode.
- Temperature and Humidity sensor (Si7020)
(Silicon Labs, 2016), the humidity and
temperature sensors are factory-calibrated and
the calibration data is stored in the on-chip
non-volatile memory. This ensures that the
sensors are fully interchangeable, with no
recalibration or software changes required.
The sensor is interfaced to the microcontroller
via I2C.
- CO2 and VOC sensor (CCS811) (AMS,
2015), an ultra-low power digital gas sensor
solution which integrates a metal oxide
(MOX) gas sensor for monitoring indoor air
quality (IAQ) including a wide range of
Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) with a
microcontroller unit (MCU), an Analog-to-
Digital converter (ADC), and an I2C
interface. The CCS811 supports multiple
measurement modes that have been optimized
for low-power consumption during an active
sensor measurement and idle mode extending
battery life.
- Occupancy sensor (EKMB1301111K)
(Panasonic, 2016), a PIR motion sensor that
guarantees an optimal detection capability and
high reliability. The sensor is able to detect motion
in 5m range with 94° of horizontal detection area
and 82° of vertical. In order to have a 360° of
coverage the solution adopted for the NOD is to
use 4 sensors (one on each edge of the NOD
device) to cover the entire range (Figure 4). When
presence is detected the output of the sensor will
be pulled high and it will cause an interrupt for the
microcontroller.
Figure 4: Solution adopted for presence detection.
Radio Communication: in operation the NOD
will be part of a standardized wireless mesh network
and, in order to send data to the middleware, the NOD
needs to have at least one wireless communication
module on board. As the NOD has more than one
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176
wireless module on board, when compared to single-
end radio devices, it has the potential to provide
increased connectivity in deployment, and can
potentially reduce the interference impact on the
network, as the system can hop from ISM band to ISM
band in an autonomous and opportunistic manner to
minimize retransmission and reduce power
consumption.
- Bluetooth Low Energy (Cypress
CYW20737S) (Cypress, 2017), enables the
user to communicate with the NOD using a
smartphone or tablet App. The module
includes an embedded BLE antenna, 24 MHz
clock, and 512 Kb EEPROM. The Bluetooth
stack and several application profiles are built
into the module.
- Wi-Fi (ATWINC1500-MR210PB) (Atmel,
2015), for interfacing the device to the
middleware sending sensing data. It is a low-
power consumption 802.11 b/g/n IoT
(Internet of Things) module, which is
specifically optimized for low power IoT
applications with a fully integrated power
amplifier, LNA, switch, power management,
and PCB antenna. The embedded processor
performs many of the MAC functions,
including but not limited to: association,
authentication, power management, security
key management, and MSDU aggregation/de-
aggregation. In addition, the processor
provides flexibility for various modes of
operation, such as STA and AP modes.
- Sub-1GHz radio chip at 868MHz (SPIRIT1)
(St, 2016), enables the NOD as a multiradio
platform. It is a very low power consumption
device and the over the air data rate is
programmable from 1 to 500 kbps. It can be
used in systems with channel spacing of
12.5/25 kHz, complying with the EN 300 220
standard. The SPIRIT1 provides an optional
automatic acknowledgement, retransmission,
and timeout protocol engine in order to reduce
overall system costs by handling all the high-
speed link layer operations. It also supports an
embedded CSMA/CA engine and An AES
128-bit encryption co-processor for secure
data transfer.
Battery Management: the battery used is a
rechargeable Lithium-ion Polymer battery with a
capacity of 3000mAh, which is recharged through the
USB port or through the use of energy harvesting
systems compatible with the built environment
connected to the battery charger chip (MP2617)
(MPS, 2015). Onboard is also present a fuel gauge
chip used to track the battery relative state of charge
(SOC) continuously over widely varying charge and
discharge conditions.
External Interface:
- Micro USB, used for multiple purposes. It is
the power input for the board and for battery
charging and it is also available for data
transfer as it is connected on the on the
interface of the microcontroller (USB 2.0).
- JTAG, to download the firmware into the
microcontroller
- UART, enable the NOD to communicate
with external peripherals and it is also used for
debugging purpose)
Figure 5: Moeebius NOD Android App.
User Interface: Electronic Paper Display (EPD),
1.44’’, resolution of 128x96 (E1144CS021)
(Pervasive Displays, 2016) and 5 capacitive touch
buttons enable the human computer interface. The
display gives a feedback to the user of the real time
status of the NOD (battery level, connection status,
sensors data). Touch buttons are used as inputs for
setting different device types (HVAC and lighting).
Another solution for the user interface can be adopted
using a mobile app that will be able to connect to the
NOD (via Bluetooth LE). It shows the NOD’s status
and is able to receive inputs from the user to set
temperature and light level.
4 NOD CONFIGURATION AND
OPERATING MODE
In this section is described how the NOD can be
configured and the how it operates in the MOEEBIUS
Network.
Innovative Low Power Multiradio Sensing and Control Device for Non-Intrusive Occupancy Monitoring
177
4.1 Configuration
In order to act as sensing device as part of a wireless
network the NOD needs to be configured when it is
powered on for the first time. This can be done through
the Wi-Fi provisioning, a process of connecting a new
Wi-Fi device (station) to a Wi-Fi network. The
provisioning process involves loading the station with
the network name (often referred to as SSID) and its
security credentials.
Wi-Fi AP Provision mode primarily demonstrates
how to configure the credentials (such as, SSID and
Passphrase) in ATWINC1500 remotely. The
configured credentials are used to connect with a
desired access point.
Remote configuration facilities such as AP
provisioning and HTTP provisioning modes are
available. In HTTP provisioning mode, the HTTP
page is used to configure the credentials. The HTTP
server is running in the WINC firmware and the HTTP
page is also stored in the WINC flash memory
(Microchip, 2017).
The NOD starts as a SoftAP using open
security mode (no security method) and
broadcasts the beacon frames with SSID
MOOEBIUS_PROVISION_AP_IDx (where Idx is
the identifier of the NOD).
A smartphone or tablet can be used to connect to
this AP. A web page will be opened where it is
possible to set the SSID and password for the
MOEEBIUS Network that the NOD will join. Those
parameters are stored in the NOD so every time it is
powered on it will connect to the network
automatically.
Figure 6: Provisioning Web Page.
This procedure needs to be done for each NOD
that will be part of the MOEEBIUS wireless network.
To save time and enable auto configuration this
can be done only on one NOD device (master) and it
will broadcast the information to the other NODs
through the Sub1-GHz module.
Other modalities to configure the device could be
through a smartphone/tablet App that send the
configuration parameters (SSID and password of the
wireless network) using the Bluetooth connection
4.2 Nod Operating Mode
As described in the previous section, when the NOD
is powered up it needs to be configured (it has to be
done only once) and the parameters (SSID and
password) are stored in the flash memory of the Wi-Fi
module. Then the NOD will scan for the Wi-Fi
networks available and it will connect to the
configured one; the NOD is connected to the Internet.
Once the connection is established the NOD will
configure the hardware driver (I2C, UART, SPI,
ADC) in order communicate with the sensors and
communication protocols on board.
By default the microcontroller is programmed to
read sensors value (Temperature, Humidity, Light
level CO2 and VOC) every 5 minutes. Duty cycle can
be configured by the user through the BLE App or
using the touch buttons. Another option is that the
server can send a command to the NODs in order to
change the time between two readings.
When the sensors data are available the NOD will
create a packet with all the readings and it will be sent
to the server in the JSON format using the HTTP
REST API. Along with the sensor data and its
reliability, the packet contains timestamp, country ID,
building ID and point name. An example is the
following:
[{
"timestamp":"2017-02-
16T14:47:00+00:00",
"countryid": "IE",
"buildingid": "TY00",
"pointname": "NOD01.CO2",
"value": "400",
"reliability":"1"
}]
Moreover all the sensors are shown on the display
along with the battery level, connection status and
current date and time.
To save power the NOD will enter in sleep mode
after the packet is sent, then it will wake up after 5
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178
minutes to read data from sensors and send them to the
server.
When the NOD is in sleep mode, it can be woken
up from different sources:
- Occupancy sensors: if presence is detected in
the range of 5 meters the microcontroller will
be woken up by the sensors interrupt and a
packet containing occupancy information
will be sent to the middleware.
- Touch button: if this button is touched by the
user the system wakes up and it will be ready
to receive user’s inputs.
- Proximity interrupt: this is an alternative to
the touch button, so if the user wants to
wakes up the NOD, he has to put his hand
close to the device (distance less than 20cm).
- Sub-1GHz: the NOD is a multiradio device
and when it is in sleep mode and receives a
packet from another device (that can be a
command or configurations instruction) on
the 868MHz ISM band the microcontroller
will wake up and elaborate the information
received.
- Fuel gauge: as described the NOD has a
battery monitoring circuit that will send an
interrupt to the microcontroller when the
battery voltage is lower than a threshold in
order to tell the user to charge the battery.
If the user wants to set desidered temperature and
light level, he simply has to navigate into the menu and
select the temperature or the light level. When the
wanted level is reached (and displayed on the screen)
the user needs to confirm the action. In this case a
command is sent to the middleware in order to set the
user’s preferences regarding environmental
conditions. The middleware will send back a
confirmation that the action has been done.
5 POWER CONSUMPTION
ANALYSIS
The current consumption analysis has been carried
out for the normal operation of the NOD (after power
up) that comprises the following behavior:
- Microcontroller, battery charger, fuel gauge
and 4 occupancy sensors always ON
- Read sensors data one at time. After each
sensor reading, it is set to standby mode
- Display sensors data on EPD
- Turn off EPD display
- Turn on Wi-fi and establish connection with
the server
- Transmit data to the server
- Turn off Wi-fi
- Microcontroller goes into sleep mode for 5
minutes
Using the Agilent Technologies N6705B DC
Power Analyzer, the current consumption for each of
the main components of the NOD are reported in
Table 1.
Figure 7 shows the NOD current consumption
profile during the normal operational mode: power on,
initialization, sensors readings and display, Wi-Fi
transmission and sleep mode.
Table 1: NOD components current consumption.
NOD components Current consumption
VCNL4020 (Light and
Proximity sensor)
Standby = 0.02 mA
Sensing = 0.45 mA
CCS811
(CO2/VOC sensor)
Standby = 0.05 mA
Sensing = 29.5 mA
Si7020 (Temperature and
Humidity sensor)
Standby = 0.01 mA
Sensing = 0.2 mA
EKMC1600100
(occupancy sensors)
Sensing = 0.12 mA
STM32F302
(Microcontroller) and all
sensors in stand by mode
ON (no operations) = 8.5 mA
Sleep mode = 4.43 mA
Stop mode = 2.96 mA
Deep sleep mode = 2.69 mA
E144CS021
(EPD display)
Display on = 6.5 mA
ATWINC1510 (Wi-Fi)
Access point mode = 111 mA
Transmitting = 110 mA
Figure 7: NOD current consumption profile (not to scale).
Innovative Low Power Multiradio Sensing and Control Device for Non-Intrusive Occupancy Monitoring
179
The average current consumption measured is
~6.23 mA.
A fully charged 3000 mAh rechargeable battery
supplying the average current will last for
approximately 20 days (1):
No. of days =

.
∗

=
(1)
This is an estimated value based on the
presumption if the NOD is reading sensors data every
5 minutes configuring the sensors in the lowest power
consumption mode, without any other interaction with
the user (touch buttons and LEDs) or using the
Bluetooth and sub-1Ghz features. Time for reading,
display and transmission data are set at maximum
values, so reducing them the current consumption will
be less.
6 CONCLUSIONS/FUTURE
WORK
This work describes the development and preliminary
characterization of a novel low power consumption
multiradio system for real-time indoor air quality
monitoring incorporating three radio interfaces, WiFi,
Bluetooth LE and 868MHz with all its features and
operating modes that bring it to a sensing/ control
Smart system (integrating a wide range of sensors and
control interface) that is easy to install and configure.
It also provides a solution for network congestion in
environment such as Home Area Network and
Commercial Buildings and Offices thanks to the
embedded multiradio feature. Additional
characterization and optimization of the system are
currently underway and future work will be focused
mostly on the firmware side improving the code
adding the multiradio features using the sub-1GHz
radio implementing protocols for reduced power
consumption.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This publication has emanated in part from research
supported in part by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
and is co-funded under the European Regional
Development Fund, Grant Number 13/RC/2077-
CONNECT. Aspects of this work have been funded
by the European Union Horizon 2020 project
MOEEBIUS under grant agreement 680517.
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