3,542 research outputs found
Energy-Optimal Scheduling in Low Duty Cycle Sensor Networks
Energy consumption of a wireless sensor node mainly depends on the amount of
time the node spends in each of the high power active (e.g., transmit, receive)
and low power sleep modes. It has been well established that in order to
prolong node's lifetime the duty-cycle of the node should be low. However, low
power sleep modes usually have low current draw but high energy cost while
switching to the active mode with a higher current draw. In this work, we
investigate a MaxWeightlike opportunistic sleep-active scheduling algorithm
that takes into account time- varying channel and traffic conditions. We show
that our algorithm is energy optimal in the sense that the proposed ESS
algorithm can achieve an energy consumption which is arbitrarily close to the
global minimum solution. Simulation studies are provided to confirm the
theoretical results
A Case for Time Slotted Channel Hopping for ICN in the IoT
Recent proposals to simplify the operation of the IoT include the use of
Information Centric Networking (ICN) paradigms. While this is promising,
several challenges remain. In this paper, our core contributions (a) leverage
ICN communication patterns to dynamically optimize the use of TSCH (Time
Slotted Channel Hopping), a wireless link layer technology increasingly popular
in the IoT, and (b) make IoT-style routing adaptive to names, resources, and
traffic patterns throughout the network--both without cross-layering. Through a
series of experiments on the FIT IoT-LAB interconnecting typical IoT hardware,
we find that our approach is fully robust against wireless interference, and
almost halves the energy consumed for transmission when compared to CSMA. Most
importantly, our adaptive scheduling prevents the time-slotted MAC layer from
sacrificing throughput and delay
Minimizing Flow Time in the Wireless Gathering Problem
We address the problem of efficient data gathering in a wireless network
through multi-hop communication. We focus on the objective of minimizing the
maximum flow time of a data packet. We prove that no polynomial time algorithm
for this problem can have approximation ratio less than \Omega(m^{1/3) when
packets have to be transmitted, unless . We then use resource
augmentation to assess the performance of a FIFO-like strategy. We prove that
this strategy is 5-speed optimal, i.e., its cost remains within the optimal
cost if we allow the algorithm to transmit data at a speed 5 times higher than
that of the optimal solution we compare to
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