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Ramtron F-RAM Technology Enables Greener Wireless Sensor Applications

COLORADO SPRINGS, CO — September 20, 2012 — Ramtron International Corporation (Nasdaq: RMTR), a leading developer and supplier of nonvolatile ferroelectric random access memory (F-RAM) and integrated semiconductor products, revealed today that the Zurich University of Applied Sciences Institute of Embedded Systems (ZHAW InES) recently presented a paper summarizing research conducted with Ramtron F-RAM designed into a battery-free wireless sensor node. The research, presented this summer at the European ZigBee® Developers Conference in Munich, Germany, demonstrated that the use of F-RAM nonvolatile memory in energy harvesting applications can reduce energy consumption of the wireless sensor node by over 40 percent while reducing the total wireless sensor system cost, as compared to systems built with standard nonvolatile memory components.

Wireless sensor — an ingenious, high-tech Rube Goldberg device

Wireless sensor networks are designed into state-of-the-art building automation systems. A wireless switch, for example, can operate without batteries or hardwired electrical infrastructure. The switch uses energy harvested from solar, mechanical or piezoelectric input (energy formed by compressing or deforming a material). The minute amount of energy given off from the switch is sufficient to power up a transmitter that sends a radio signal to a receiver that powers up lighting or other systems in a home or office. The wireless switch is economical and eliminates wiring, battery replacement, and labor costs. A wireless switch can also provide creative design flexibility for architects, as the wireless switch can be positioned virtually anywhere, uninhibited by wires and conduit.

F-RAM reduces cost, improves performance

Research led by ZHAW professor, Dr. Marcel Meli, concluded that the use of F-RAM nonvolatile memory in a wireless switch can improve the performance of energy harvesting powered ZigBee wireless nodes (low-power digital radio). “The justification for using a wireless switch comes from lower installation and maintenance costs, but a ZigBee-sensor requires a lot of overhead. The more energy is required, the more expensive the system,” comments Prof. Dr. Meli. “We have discovered that by using the inherently low-power F-RAM from Ramtron in our experimental board designs, more energy is available for the transmitter and other functions, like saving the processor status. We also recognize the longevity of the F-RAM cell. Compared to traditional nonvolatile memories like EEPROM or Flash, F-RAM can be rewritten virtually forever—well in excess of a typical wireless product’s lifetime.”

Prof. Dr. Meli’s research also suggests that F-RAM can reduce the total bill-of-materials associated with wireless sensor nodes powered by harvested energy. By using F-RAM to restore the state of the processor only when enough energy is available, less power management is required and there are fewer constraints on the storage system, thereby reducing system complexity and component costs.
A PDF presentation of the research by Prof. Dr. Marcel Meli and Mr. Marcel da Silva, Using F-RAM in Battery-less 802.15.4/ZigBee Applications, is available for download from bit.ly/Qlaq9r.

About ZHAW InES

The Institute of Embedded Systems (InES) is a recognized research and development institute at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences (ZHAW) with a primary focus on networked embedded systems in energy, health and mobility applications. Located in Winterthur, Switzerland, the ZHAW is a major R&D center in Europe. InES offers clients and partners low-risk access to pioneering technologies. With a team of forty graduate engineers, InES’s world-class experience in innovative technology has made the institute the partner-of-choice for many leading companies. InES technological expertise includes: highly available and real-time Ethernet communication; precision time-synchronization; wireless communication, RFID and energy harvesting; low power embedded systems; formal engineering methods for embedded system design; audio and video processing and transmission. For more information, visit www.ines.zhaw.ch/en.html.

About Ramtron

Ramtron International Corporation, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is a fabless semiconductor company that designs, develops and markets specialized semiconductor memory and integrated semiconductor solutions used in a wide range of product applications and markets worldwide. For more information, visit www.ramtron.com.

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