Low-Cost Energy-Autonomous Sensor Nodes Through RF Energy Harvesting and Printed Technology Moreno-Cruz, Fernando Romero Maldonado, Francisco Javier Rodríguez Santiago, Noel Morales Santos, Diego Pedro Rivadeneyra Torres, Almudena Radio frequency energy harvesting printed flexible sensors IoT Sprayed flexible technology Store-and-use principle The irruption of Internet of Things and 5G in our society comes along with several technological challenges to overcome. From an overall perspective, the low-cost and environmental friendliness of these technologies need to be ensured for their universal deployment in different areas, starting with the sensors and finishing with the power sources. To address these challenges, the production and maintenance of a great number of sensor nodes incur costs, which include manufacturing and integration in mass of elements and sub-blocks, changing or recharging of batteries, as well as management of natural resources and waste. In this article, we demonstrate how Radio Frequency Energy Harvesting (RFEH) and printed flexible technology (a growing technology for sensors) can solve these concerns through costeffective mass-production and utilization of energy harvesting for the development of energy-autonomous nodes, as part of a wireless sensor network. We present as illustration a sprayed flexible relative humidity sensor powered with RFEH under the store-and-use principle. 2020-03-31T11:33:05Z 2020-03-31T11:33:05Z 2020-03-22 info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 978-1-61208-766-5 http://hdl.handle.net/10481/60881 eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Jaime Lloret Mauri, Paulo E. Cruvinel, Almudena Rivadeneyra-Torres, Michael Niedermayer, Sandrine Bernardini, Matteo Tonezzer