3,238 research outputs found
A bounded heuristic for collection-based routing in wireless sensor networks
Wireless sensor networks are used to monitor and control physical phenomena and to provide interaction between clients and the physical environment. Clients have been typically users or user applications, but next generation wireless sensor networks will also work in machine-to-machine scenarios where some nodes can be interested in some other nodes' data. These scenarios may run the risk of becoming overloaded with messaging, a pernicious fact in particular for constrained networks where both bandwidth and power supply are limited. Resource collections can be used in wireless sensor networks to improve bandwidth usage and to reduce energy consumption, reducing the overall number of notification packets and wrapping overhead, required for the delivery of sensor data. This article proposes a heuristic algorithm for the planning of both routing and collections, in wireless sensor networks. Results show that collections are always worthwhile, and that the heuristic is able to find feasible and cost effective solutions, approaching its lower bound.FCT from Portugal within the CEOT research center [UID/MULTI/00631/2013
Multi-Channel Scheduling for Fast Convergecast in Wireless Sensor Networks
We explore the following fundamental question -
how fast can information be collected from a wireless sensor
network? We consider a number of design parameters such
as, power control, time and frequency scheduling, and routing.
There are essentially two factors that hinder efficient data
collection - interference and the half-duplex single-transceiver
radios. We show that while power control helps in reducing the
number of transmission slots to complete a convergecast under a
single frequency channel, scheduling transmissions on different
frequency channels is more efficient in mitigating the effects of
interference (empirically, 6 channels suffice for most 100-node
networks). With these observations, we define a receiver-based
channel assignment problem, and prove it to be NP-complete on
general graphs. We then introduce a greedy channel assignment
algorithm that efficiently eliminates interference, and compare
its performance with other existing schemes via simulations.
Once the interference is completely eliminated, we show that
with half-duplex single-transceiver radios the achievable schedule
length is lower-bounded by max(2nk − 1,N), where nk is the
maximum number of nodes on any subtree and N is the number
of nodes in the network. We modify an existing distributed time
slot assignment algorithm to achieve this bound when a suitable
balanced routing scheme is employed. Through extensive simulations,
we demonstrate that convergecast can be completed within
up to 50% less time slots, in 100-node networks, using multiple
channels as compared to that with single-channel communication.
Finally, we also demonstrate further improvements that are
possible when the sink is equipped with multiple transceivers
or when there are multiple sinks to collect data
Joint Routing and STDMA-based Scheduling to Minimize Delays in Grid Wireless Sensor Networks
In this report, we study the issue of delay optimization and energy
efficiency in grid wireless sensor networks (WSNs). We focus on STDMA (Spatial
Reuse TDMA)) scheduling, where a predefined cycle is repeated, and where each
node has fixed transmission opportunities during specific slots (defined by
colors). We assume a STDMA algorithm that takes advantage of the regularity of
grid topology to also provide a spatially periodic coloring ("tiling" of the
same color pattern). In this setting, the key challenges are: 1) minimizing the
average routing delay by ordering the slots in the cycle 2) being energy
efficient. Our work follows two directions: first, the baseline performance is
evaluated when nothing specific is done and the colors are randomly ordered in
the STDMA cycle. Then, we propose a solution, ORCHID that deliberately
constructs an efficient STDMA schedule. It proceeds in two steps. In the first
step, ORCHID starts form a colored grid and builds a hierarchical routing based
on these colors. In the second step, ORCHID builds a color ordering, by
considering jointly both routing and scheduling so as to ensure that any node
will reach a sink in a single STDMA cycle. We study the performance of these
solutions by means of simulations and modeling. Results show the excellent
performance of ORCHID in terms of delays and energy compared to a shortest path
routing that uses the delay as a heuristic. We also present the adaptation of
ORCHID to general networks under the SINR interference model
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