Temperature has a significant impact on the operation and performance of electronic systems. Conventional approaches focus on stabilizing electronic systems to maintain functionality under unfavorable thermal conditions, typically at the expense of increased consumption. This paper adopts a multi-objective approach to identify the Pareto-optimal (PO) trade-off across varying temperatures between functionality and consumption of low-power radio transceivers used in the Internet of Things (IoT) and wireless sensor networks. Building upon the established two-segment PO trade-off controlled by supply voltage and output power settings, between engaged and achieved transmission power, parameters directly associated with energy consumption and transmission quality, we analyze the influence of temperature on the Pareto front. We find that decreasing the temperature improves both engaged power and achieved transmission power simultaneously. Therefore, we propose a novel Pareto-optimal temperature-opportunistic wireless communication approach that exploits temperature variability by selecting favorable temperature conditions for transmission. We also identify the spatio-temporal potential of temperature variations across a four-dimensional network deployment space, particularly in temperature-dynamic urban environments of smart city infrastructure supporting massive IoT. Experiments on a modern Texas Instruments CC1200 transceiver confirm that the power savings of approx 30% and nearly 450 times increase in achieved transmission power are attainable for a temperature difference of 60 °C, corresponding to realistic conditions between the ambient air and a black-painted surface.
Zogović et al. (Tue,) studied this question.