Enabling Efficient Wearables: An Analysis of Low-Power Microcontrollers for Biomedical Applications
Dimitrios Samakovlis, Stefano Albini, Rub\'en Rodr\'iguez \'Alvarez,, Denisa-Andreea Constantinescu, Pasquale Davide Schiavone, Miguel, Pe\'on-Quir\'os, David Atienza

TL;DR
This paper systematically evaluates state-of-the-art low-power microcontrollers for biomedical wearables, analyzing their energy efficiency and processing capabilities across various application scenarios to guide hardware design and platform selection.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive benchmarking framework and insights into the performance and energy trade-offs of current low-power microcontrollers for wearable biomedical applications.
Findings
Identifies key hardware features influencing energy efficiency.
Highlights performance disparities among microcontroller platforms.
Offers recommendations for optimizing wearable device hardware.
Abstract
Breakthroughs in ultra-low-power chip technology are transforming biomedical wearables, making it possible to monitor patients in real time with devices operating on mere {\mu}W. Although many studies have examined the power performance of commercial microcontrollers, it remains unclear which ones perform best across diverse application profiles and which hardware features are most crucial for minimizing energy consumption under varying computational loads. Identifying these features for typical wearable applications and understanding their effects on performance and energy efficiency are essential for optimizing deployment strategies and informing future hardware designs. In this work, we conduct an in-depth study of state-of-the-art (SoA) micro-controller units(MCUs) in terms of processing capability and energy efficiency using representative end-to-end SoA wearable applications. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
