3 research outputs found

    Study on Different Topology Manipulation Algorithms in Wireless Sensor Network

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    Wireless sensor network (WSN) comprises of spatially distributed autonomous sensors to screen physical or environmental conditions and to agreeably go their information through the network to a principle area. One of the critical necessities of a WSN is the efficiency of vitality, which expands the life time of the network. At the same time there are some different variables like Load Balancing, congestion control, coverage, Energy Efficiency, mobility and so on. A few methods have been proposed via scientists to accomplish these objectives that can help in giving a decent topology control. In the piece, a few systems which are accessible by utilizing improvement and transformative strategies that give a multi target arrangement are examined. In this paper, we compare different algorithms' execution in view of a few parameters intended for every target and the outcomes are analyzed. DOI: 10.17762/ijritcc2321-8169.15029

    A Scale-Free Topology Construction Model for Wireless Sensor Networks

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    A local-area and energy-efficient (LAEE) evolution model for wireless sensor networks is proposed. The process of topology evolution is divided into two phases. In the first phase, nodes are distributed randomly in a fixed region. In the second phase, according to the spatial structure of wireless sensor networks, topology evolution starts from the sink, grows with an energy-efficient preferential attachment rule in the new node's local-area, and stops until all nodes are connected into network. Both analysis and simulation results show that the degree distribution of LAEE follows the power law. This topology construction model has better tolerance against energy depletion or random failure than other non-scale-free WSN topologies.Comment: 13pages, 3 figure

    Resilient Wireless Sensor Networks Using Topology Control: A Review

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    Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) may be deployed in failure-prone environments, and WSNs nodes easily fail due to unreliable wireless connections, malicious attacks and resource-constrained features. Nevertheless, if WSNs can tolerate at most losing k − 1 nodes while the rest of nodes remain connected, the network is called k − connected. k is one of the most important indicators for WSNs’ self-healing capability. Following a WSN design flow, this paper surveys resilience issues from the topology control and multi-path routing point of view. This paper provides a discussion on transmission and failure models, which have an important impact on research results. Afterwards, this paper reviews theoretical results and representative topology control approaches to guarantee WSNs to be k − connected at three different network deployment stages: pre-deployment, post-deployment and re-deployment. Multi-path routing protocols are discussed, and many NP-complete or NP-hard problems regarding topology control are identified. The challenging open issues are discussed at the end. This paper can serve as a guideline to design resilient WSNs
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