189 research outputs found

    Energy-efficient wireless medium access control protocols for Specknets

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    Energy-Efficient Communication in Wireless Networks

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    This chapter describes the evolution of, and state of the art in, energy‐efficient techniques for wirelessly communicating networks of embedded computers, such as those found in wireless sensor network (WSN), Internet of Things (IoT) and cyberphysical systems (CPS) applications. Specifically, emphasis is placed on energy efficiency as critical to ensuring the feasibility of long lifetime, low‐maintenance and increasingly autonomous monitoring and control scenarios. A comprehensive summary of link layer and routing protocols for a variety of traffic patterns is discussed, in addition to their combination and evaluation as full protocol stacks

    Efficient duty cycle MAC protocols for dynamic traffic loads in wireless sensor networks

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    Idle listening is one of the most significant causes of energy consumption in wireless sensor networks (WSNs), and many protocols have been proposed based on duty cycling to reduce this cost. These protocols, either synchronous or asynchronous, are mainly optimized for light traffic loads. A WSN, however, could often experience bursty and high traffic loads, as may happen for example with broadcast or convergecast traffic. In this thesis, I design and evaluate a new synchronous protocol, DW-MAC (Demand Wakeup MAC), and a new asynchronous protocol, RI-MAC (Receiver Initiated MAC), that are both efficient under dynamic traffic loads, including light or heavy loads. I also design and evaluate ADB (Asynchronous Duty-cycle Broadcasting), a new protocol for efficient multihop broadcasting in WSNs using asynchronous duty cycling. DW-MAC introduces a new low-overhead scheduling algorithm that allows nodes to wake up on demand during the Sleep period of an operational cycle and ensures that data transmissions do not collide at their intended receivers; this demand wakeup adaptively increases effective channel capacity as traffic load increases. RI-MAC, instead, uses receiver-initiated transmissions, in which each transmitter passively waits until its intended receiver wakes up and transmits a beacon frame; this technique minimizes the time a sender and its intended receiver occupy the wireless medium to find a rendezvous time for exchanging data. ADB is integrated with RI-MAC to exploit information only available at this layer; rather than treating the data transmission from a node to all of its neighbors as the basic unit of progress for the multihop broadcast. ADB dynamically optimizes the broadcast at the level of transmission to each individual neighbor of a node as the neighbors asynchronously wakeup, avoiding redundant transmissions and transmissions over poor links, and allowing a transmitter to go to sleep as early as possible. In detailed simulation of all three protocols using ns-2, they each substantially outperform earlier competing protocols in terms of reduced energy and latency and increased packet delivery ratio. I also implemented RI-MAC and ADB in a testbed of MICAz motes using TinyOS and further demonstrate the significant performance improvements made over prior protocols

    A Comparative Study of Energy Efficient Medium Access Control Protocols in Wireless Sensor Networks

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    This project investigates energy usage in three energy-efficient WSN MAC protocols (AS-MAC, SCP-MAC, and Crankshaft) on TelosB wireless sensors. It additionally presents BAS-MAC, an energy-efficient protocol of our own design. Our evaluations show that in single-hop networks with large send intervals and staggered sending, AS-MAC is best in the local gossip and convergecast scenarios, while SCP-MAC is best overall in the broadcast scenario. We conjecture that Crankshaft would perform best in extremely dense hybrid (unicast and broadcast) network topologies, especially those which broadcast frequently. Finally, BAS-MAC would be optimal in networks which utilize hybrid traffic with infrequent broadcasts, and where broadcasting is performed by motes that do not have an unlimited power source

    Wake-up radio systems : design, development, performance evaluation and comparison to conventional medium access control protocols for wireless sensor networks

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    During the recent years, the research related to Wake-up Radio (WuR) systems has gained noticeable interest. In WuR systems, a node initiating a communication first sends a Wake-up Call (WuC) by means of its Wake-up Transmitter (WuTx), to the Wake-up Receiver (WuRx) of a remote node to activate it in an on-demand manner. Until the reception of the WuC, the node's MCU and main data transceiver are in sleep mode. Hence, WuR drastically reduce the power required by wireless nodes. This thesis provides a complete analysis of several WuR designs vs. conventional MAC protocols for Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN). The research is performed in an incremental fashion and includes hardware, softwar and simulation topics. WuR systems enable energy savings in plenty of different applications, e.g., retrieving information from environmental pollution sensors placed in a city by a mobile collector node, or activating a sleeping wireless AP. They are easy to program in and provide implicit synchronization. However, achieving a good WuRx design may become a challenge because power amplifiers cannot be used for the sake of energy. The system proposed in chapter 2 is a successful WuR system prototype. The so-called S”A-WuRx is less complex than commercial WuR systems, it is cheaper from the monetary point of view, requires several times less energy and allows for up to 15 meters of communication, an adequate value for WuR systems. However, the system can be improved by including several desirable features, such as longer operational ranges and/or addressing mechanisms. The so-called Time-Knocking (TicK) addressing strategy, analyzed in chapter 3, enables energy efficient node addressing by varying the time between WuCs received by a MCU. TicK allows for variable length addresses and multicast. A WuR system may not fit any possible application. Thus, while the S”A-WuRx and TicK efficiently solved many of the requirements of single-hop and data-collector applications, they lack of flexibility. Instead, SCM-WuR systems in chapter 4 feature an outstanding trade-off between hardware complexity, current consumption and operational range, and even enable multi-hop wake-up for long remote sensor measure collection. To contextualize the WuR systems developed, chapter 5 provides an overview of the most important WuR systems as of 2014. Developing a MAC protocol which performs acceptably in a wide range of diverse applications is a very difficult task. Comparatively, SCM-WuR systems perform properly in all the use cases (single and multi-hop) presented in chapter 6. Bluetooth Low Energy, or BLE, appears as a duty-cycled MAC protocol mainly targeting single-hop applications. Because of its clearly defined use cases and its integration with its upper application layers, BLE appears as an extremely energy-efficient protocol that cannot be easily replaced by WuR. Because of all these aspects, the performance of BLE is analyzed in chapter 7. Finally, chapter 8 tries to solve one of the issues affecting WuR systems, that is, the need for extra hardware. While this issue seems difficult to solve for WuRx, the chapter provides ideas to use IEEE 802.11-enabled devices as WuTx.Durant els Ășltims anys, la investigaciĂł relativa als sistemes de RĂ dios de Wake-up (de l'anglĂšs Wake-up Radio, WuR) ha experimentat un interĂšs notable. En aquests sistemes, un node inicia la comunicaciĂł inal.lĂ mbrica transmetent una Wake-up Call (WuC), per mitjĂ  del seu transmissor de Wake-up (WuTx), dirigida al receptor de Wake-up (WuRx) del node remot. Aquesta WuC activa el node remot, el microcontrolador (MCU) i la rĂ dio principals del qual han pogut romandre en mode "sleep" fins el moment. AixĂ­ doncs, els sistemes WuR permeten un estalvi drĂ stic de l'energia requerida pels nodes sense fils. Aquesta tesi proposa diferents sistemes WuR i els compara amb protocols MAC existents per a xarxes de sensors sense fils (Wireless Sensor Networks, WSN). La investigaciĂł es realitza de forma progressiva i inclou hardware, software i simulaciĂł. Els sistemes WuR permeten un estalvi energĂštic notable en moltes aplicacions: recolÂżlecciĂł d'informaciĂł ambiental, activaciĂł remota de punts d'accĂ©s wi-fi, etc. SĂłn fĂ cils de programar en software i comporten una sincronitzaciĂł implĂ­cita entre nodes. Malauradament, un consum energĂštic mĂ­nim impossibilita l'Ășs d'amplificadors de potĂšncia, i dissenyar-los esdevĂ© un repte. El sistema presentat en el capĂ­tol 2 Ă©s un prototip exitĂłs de sistema WuR. De nom S”A-WuR, Ă©s mĂ©s senzill que alternatives comercials, Ă©s mĂ©s econĂČmic, requereix menys energia i permet distĂ ncies de comunicaciĂł WuR majors, de fins a 15 metres. L'estratĂšgia d'adreçament Time-KnocKing, presentada en el capĂ­tol 3, permet dotar l'anterior S”A-WuR d'una forma d'especificar el node adreçat, permetent estalvi energĂštic a nivell de xarxa. TicK opera codificant el temps entre diferents WuC. Depenent del temps entre intervals, es desperten el/s node/s desitjats d'una forma extremadament eficient. Tot i els seus beneficis, hi ha aplicacions no implementables amb el sistema S”A-WuR. Per a aquest motiu, en el capĂ­tol 4 es presenta el sistema SCM-WuR, que ofereix un rang d'operaciĂł de 40 a 100 metres a canvi d'una mĂ­nima complexitat hardware afegida. SCM-WuR cobreix el ventall d'aplicacions del sistema S”A-WuRx, i tambĂ© les que requereixen multi-hop a nivell WuR. El capĂ­tol 5 de la tesi compara els dos sistemes WuR anteriors vers les propostes mĂ©s importants fins el 2014. El capĂ­tol 6 inclou un framework de simulaciĂł complet amb les bases per a substituir els sistemes basats en duty-cycling a WuR. Degut a que desenvolupar un protocol MAC que operi acceptablement bĂ© en multitud d'aplicacions esdevĂ© una tasca prĂ cticament impossible, els sistemes WuR presentats amb anterioritat i modelats en aquest capĂ­tol representen una soluciĂł versĂ til, interessant i molt mĂ©s eficient des del punt de vista energĂštic. Bluetooth Low Energy, o Smart, o BLE, representa un cas d'aplicaciĂł especĂ­fica on, degut a la gran integraciĂł a nivell d'aplicaciĂł, la substituciĂł per sistemes de WuR esdevĂ© difĂ­cil Per a aquesta raĂł, i degut a que es tracta d'un protocol MAC extremadament eficient energĂšticament, aquesta tesi contĂ© una caracteritzaciĂł completa de BLE en el capĂ­tol 7. Finalment, el capĂ­tol 8 soluciona un dels inconvenients del sistemes WuR, el disseny de WuTx especĂ­fics, presentant una estratĂšgia per a transformar qualsevol dispositiu IEEE 802.11 en WuTx

    Performance Comparison of Dual Connectivity and Hard Handover for LTE-5G Tight Integration in mmWave Cellular Networks

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    MmWave communications are expected to play a major role in the Fifth generation of mobile networks. They offer a potential multi-gigabit throughput and an ultra-low radio latency, but at the same time suffer from high isotropic pathloss, and a coverage area much smaller than the one of LTE macrocells. In order to address these issues, highly directional beamforming and a very high-density deployment of mmWave base stations were proposed. This Thesis aims to improve the reliability and performance of the 5G network by studying its tight and seamless integration with the current LTE cellular network. In particular, the LTE base stations can provide a coverage layer for 5G mobile terminals, because they operate on microWave frequencies, which are less sensitive to blockage and have a lower pathloss. This document is a copy of the Master's Thesis carried out by Mr. Michele Polese under the supervision of Dr. Marco Mezzavilla and Prof. Michele Zorzi. It will propose an LTE-5G tight integration architecture, based on mobile terminals' dual connectivity to LTE and 5G radio access networks, and will evaluate which are the new network procedures that will be needed to support it. Moreover, this new architecture will be implemented in the ns-3 simulator, and a thorough simulation campaign will be conducted in order to evaluate its performance, with respect to the baseline of handover between LTE and 5G.Comment: Master's Thesis carried out by Mr. Michele Polese under the supervision of Dr. Marco Mezzavilla and Prof. Michele Zorz

    Quality-of-Service-Adequate Wireless Receiver Design

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