7 research outputs found

    Energy aware power save mode management in wireless mesh networks

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    In recent times Wireless Mesh Networks (WMN) have evolved as powerful networks for most commercial applications. Many contributions have been made to enhance the performance of WMN of which the enhancement of the network lifetime remains as one of the challenging area for research. IEEE standard proposed an amendment which introduced Power Save Mode (PSM) in order to increase the lifetime of WMN. It has three modes such as Active, Light Sleep and Deep Sleep. There exist a lot of literature on increasing energy efficiency by keeping node in Deep Sleep mode when it is not involved in transmission. But current Power Save Mode has some deficiency in low Packet Delivery Ratio (PDR). This paper presents Energy Aware Power Save Mode (EAPSM) which attempt to overcome the deficiency of low PDR by triggering PSM. EAPSM consist of three modules namely, remaining energy calculator, transmission mode identifier and PSM scheduler. EAPSM schedules PSM based on the constraints such as remaining energy of a node and its participation in transmission. The proposed method includes mathematical model and algorithms which gives improved performance over conventional PSM

    Performance Analysis of the IEEE 802.11s PSM

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    Energy Efficient Protocols for Delay Tolerant Networks

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    The delay tolerant networks (DTNs) is characterized by frequent disconnections and long delays of links among devices due to mobility, sparse deployment of devices, attacks, and noise, etc. Considerable research efforts have been devoted recently to DTNs enabling communications between network entities with intermittent connectivity. Unfortunately, mobile devices have limited energy capacity, and the fundamental problem is that traditional power-saving mechanisms are designed assuming well connected networks. Due to much larger inter-contact durations than contact durations, devices spend most of their life time in the neighbor discovery, and centralized power-saving strategies are difficult. Consequently, mobile devices consume a significant amount of energy in the neighbor discovery, rather than in infrequent data transfers. Therefore, distributed energy efficient neighbor discovery protocols for DTNs are essential to minimize the degradation of network connectivity and maximize the benefits from mobility. In this thesis, we develop sleep scheduling protocols in the medium access control (MAC) layer that are adaptive and distributed under different clock synchronization conditions: synchronous, asynchronous, and semi-asynchronous. In addition, we propose a distributed clock synchronization protocol to mitigate the clock synchronization problem in DTNs. Our research accomplishments are briefly outlined as follows: Firstly, we design an adaptive exponential beacon (AEB) protocol. By exploiting the trend of contact availability, beacon periods are independently adjusted by each device and optimized using the distribution of contact durations. The AEB protocol significantly reduces energy consumption while maintaining comparable packet delivery delay and delivery ratio. Secondly, we design two asynchronous clock based sleep scheduling (ACDS) protocols. Based on the fact that global clock synchronization is difficult to achieve in general, predetermined patterns of sleep schedules are constructed using hierarchical arrangements of cyclic difference sets such that devices independently selecting different duty cycle lengths are still guaranteed to have overlapping awake intervals with other devices within the communication range. Thirdly, we design a distributed semi-asynchronous sleep scheduling (DSA) protocol. Although the synchronization error is unavoidable, some level of clock accuracy may be possible for many practical scenarios. The sleep schedules are constructed to guarantee contacts among devices having loosely synchronized clocks, and parameters are optimized using the distribution of synchronization error. We also define conditions for which the proposed semi-asynchronous protocol outperforms existing asynchronous sleep scheduling protocols. Lastly, we design a distributed clock synchronization (DCS) protocol. The proposed protocol considers asynchronous and long delayed connections when exchanging relative clock information among nodes. As a result, smaller synchronization error achieved by the proposed protocol allows more accurate timing information and renders neighbor discovery more energy efficient. The designed protocols improve the lifetime of mobile devices in DTNs by means of energy efficient neighbor discoveries that reduce the energy waste caused by idle listening problems
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