3,303 research outputs found
An antenna switching based NOMA scheme for IEEE 802.15.4 concurrent transmission
This paper introduces a Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (NOMA) scheme to support concurrent transmission of multiple IEEE 802.15.4 packets. Unlike collision avoidance Multiple Access Control (MAC), concurrent transmission supports Concurrent-MAC (C-MAC) where packet collision is allowed. The communication latency can be reduced by C-MAC because a user can transmit immediately without waiting for the completion of other users’ transmission. The big challenge of concurrent transmission is that error free demodulation of multiple collided packets hardly can be achieved due to severe Multiple Access Interference (MAI). To improve the demodulation performance with MAI presented, we introduce an architecture with multiple switching antennas sharing a single analog transceiver to capture spatial character of different users. Successive Interference Cancellation (SIC) algorithm is designed to separate collided packets by utilizing the spatial character. Simulation shows that at least five users can transmit concurrently to the SIC receiver equipped with eight antennas without sacrificing Packet Error Rate
Seamless roaming and guaranteed communication using a synchronized single-hop multi-gateway 802.15.4e TSCH network
Industrial wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are being used to improve the
efficiency, productivity and safety of industrial processes. An open standard
that is commonly used in such cases is IEEE 802.15.4e. Its TSCH mode employs a
time synchronized based MAC scheme together with channel hopping to alleviate
the impact of channel fading. Until now, most of the industrial WSNs have been
designed to only support static nodes and are not able to deal with mobility.
In this paper, we show how a single-hop, multi-gateway IEEE 802.15.4e TSCH
network architecture can tackle the mobility problem. We introduce the Virtual
Grand Master (VGM) concept that moves the synchronization point from separated
Backbone Border Routers (BBRs) towards the backbone network. With time
synchronization of all BBRs, mobile nodes can roam from one BBR to another
without time desynchronization. In addition to time synchronization, we
introduce a mechanism to synchronize the schedules between BBRs to support fast
handover of mobile nodes.Comment: Short paper version of a paper submitted to Ad-Hoc Networks Journal
by Elsevie
- …