SEMI Arizona Forum targets MEMS advances at the IoT edge
March 12, 2014
The SEMI Arizona Breakfast Forum on April 17th at Intel's Ocotillo facility in Chandler, AZ focuses on semiconductor challenges in the Internet of Thi...
For all the big ideas, big networks, and big data to come from the Internet of Things (IoT), its foundation rests on the smallest of devices. Micro-electromechanical Systems (MEMS) sensors will be at the frontline of data gathering and analysis in the IoT, and while it’s evident there won’t be a problem finding data to collect, the challenge will be in blending data from multiple sources to improve efficiency and enable new applications. One answer, MEMS sensor fusion.
MEMS sensor fusion technology works to filter input data from multiple sensors for a more accurate and dynamic result, for example by taking measurements from a 3-axis magnetometer, 3-axis gyroscope, and 3-axis accelerometer and applying algorithms to provide a common value, such as location. However, more complex sensor fusion may be needed for various applications within an IoT context, and despite silicon-level advances over the past few years, a couple of shortcomings have impeded the development of sensor fusion technology, including:
• Extremely complex mathematics pose high barriers to entry for those without solutions in place
• Significant amounts of code that must be developed before even initial sensor samples are received
Efforts to improve MEMS sensor fusion are occurring on many fronts, with the development of standardized MEMS sensing frameworks and the use of hardware/software co-design being two examples. Mike Stanley, Systems Engineer at Freescale Semiconductor in Tempe, AZ (www.freescale.com) believes that “hardware/software co-design will be done at the lowest level of the IoT – the embedded sensor board,” as the “tools exist and are relatively straightforward to use.” However, he also notes that although nearly any algorithm can be implemented in gates using C-to-RTL synthesis tools, this typically results in a power/performance/cost tradeoff, as well as an increased risk of changing algorithms once they have been reduced to the gates level (Figure 1).
“The challenge is to identify those functions which are stable enough, and used enough, to make it worthwhile to implement them as gates without having a significant device cost,” says Stanley. “I expect we will have a moving target over time as algorithms mature and new capabilities are needed.”
These and other semiconductor-level challenges in the IoT are being addressed at the SEMI Arizona Breakfast Forum on April 17th at Intel’s Ocotillo Campus in Chandler, AZ. In addition to the relationship between MEMS sensor fusion and the IoT, the program will examine the impact of IoT rollouts on the entire electronics value chain, examining how business models are adapting to changing market dynamics along the way.
Interested parties can register online at www.semi.org/en/node/48626.
SEMI Arizona Breakfast Forum – Internet of Things featured speakers:
• Adam Burns, Director of Product Marketing & Business Development, IoT Solutions Group, Intel
• Babak Taheri, Vice President & General Manager, Sensor Solutions Division, Freescale Semiconductor
• Raph Danzl, Senior Principal Engineer, Medtronic
• Tony Massmini, Chief of Technology, Semico Research
• Jim McGregor, Founder/Principal Analyst, TIRIAS Research