Boosting Quantum Battery-Based IoT Gadgets via RF-Enabled Energy Harvesting

Sensors (Basel). 2022 Jul 19;22(14):5385. doi: 10.3390/s22145385.

Abstract

The search for a highly portable and efficient supply of energy to run small-scale wireless gadgets has captivated the human race for the past few years. As a part of this quest, the idea of realizing a Quantum battery (QB) seems promising. Like any other practically tractable system, the design of QBs also involve several critical challenges. The main problem in this context is to ensure a lossless environment pertaining to the closed-system design of the QB, which is extremely difficult to realize in practice. Herein, we model and optimize various aspects of a Radio-Frequency (RF) Energy Harvesting (EH)-assisted, QB-enabled Internet-of-Things (IoT) system. Several RF-EH modules (in the form of micro- or nano-meter-sized integrated circuits (ICs)) are placed in parallel at the IoT receiver device, and the overall correspondingly harvested energy helps the involved Quantum sources achieve the so-called quasi-stable state. Concretely, the Quantum sources absorb the energy of photons that are emitted by a photon-emitting device controlled by a micro-controller, which also manages the overall harvested energy from the RF-EH ICs. To investigate the considered framework, we first minimize the total transmit power under the constraints on overall harvested energy and the number of RF-EH ICs at the QB-enabled wireless IoT device. Next, we optimize the number of RF-EH ICs, subject to the constraints on total transmit power and overall harvested energy. Correspondingly, we obtain suitable analytical solutions to the above-mentioned problems, respectively, and also cross-validate them using a non-linear program solver. The effectiveness of the proposed technique is reported in the form of numerical results, which are both theoretical and simulations based, by taking a range of operating system parameters into account.

Keywords: 5G and beyond/6G wireless networks; IoT; RF-energy harvesting; greencom; quantum battery; transmit power optimization.

Grants and funding

The research leading to these results has received funding from the Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR), Luxembourg, under the FNR-FNRS bilateral InWIP-NET: Integrated Wireless Information and Power Networks (R-AGR-0700-10-X). The authors also acknowledge the joint research work carried out between the Indian Institute of Technology—Indore and the University of Luxembourg, enabled by their mutual Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).