1,721 research outputs found
Sequential Decision Algorithms for Measurement-Based Impromptu Deployment of a Wireless Relay Network along a Line
We are motivated by the need, in some applications, for impromptu or
as-you-go deployment of wireless sensor networks. A person walks along a line,
starting from a sink node (e.g., a base-station), and proceeds towards a source
node (e.g., a sensor) which is at an a priori unknown location. At equally
spaced locations, he makes link quality measurements to the previous relay, and
deploys relays at some of these locations, with the aim to connect the source
to the sink by a multihop wireless path. In this paper, we consider two
approaches for impromptu deployment: (i) the deployment agent can only move
forward (which we call a pure as-you-go approach), and (ii) the deployment
agent can make measurements over several consecutive steps before selecting a
placement location among them (which we call an explore-forward approach). We
consider a light traffic regime, and formulate the problem as a Markov decision
process, where the trade-off is among the power used by the nodes, the outage
probabilities in the links, and the number of relays placed per unit distance.
We obtain the structures of the optimal policies for the pure as-you-go
approach as well as for the explore-forward approach. We also consider natural
heuristic algorithms, for comparison. Numerical examples show that the
explore-forward approach significantly outperforms the pure as-you-go approach.
Next, we propose two learning algorithms for the explore-forward approach,
based on Stochastic Approximation, which asymptotically converge to the set of
optimal policies, without using any knowledge of the radio propagation model.
We demonstrate numerically that the learning algorithms can converge (as
deployment progresses) to the set of optimal policies reasonably fast and,
hence, can be practical, model-free algorithms for deployment over large
regions.Comment: 29 pages. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1308.068
Optimal fault-tolerant placement of relay nodes in a mission critical wireless network
The operations of many critical infrastructures (e.g., airports) heavily depend on proper functioning of the radio communication network supporting operations. As a result, such a communication network is indeed a mission-critical communication network that needs adequate protection from external electromagnetic interferences. This is usually done through radiogoniometers. Basically, by using at least three suitably deployed radiogoniometers and a gateway gathering information from them, sources of electromagnetic emissions that are not supposed to be present in the monitored area can be localised. Typically, relay nodes are used to connect radiogoniometers to the gateway. As a result, some degree of fault-tolerance for the network of relay nodes is essential in order to offer a reliable monitoring. On the other hand, deployment of relay nodes is typically quite expensive. As a result, we have two conflicting requirements: minimise costs while guaranteeing a given fault-tolerance. In this paper address the problem of computing a deployment for relay nodes that minimises the relay node network cost while at the same time guaranteeing proper working of the network even when some of the relay nodes (up to a given maximum number) become faulty (fault-tolerance). We show that the above problem can be formulated as a Mixed Integer Linear Programming (MILP) as well as a Pseudo-Boolean Satisfiability (PB-SAT) optimisation problem and present experimental results com- paring the two approaches on realistic scenarios
Resilient Wireless Sensor Networks Using Topology Control: A Review
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
Joint Optimal Design for Outage Minimization in DF Relay-assisted Underwater Acoustic Networks
This letter minimizes outage probability in a single decode-and-forward (DF)
relay-assisted underwater acoustic network (UAN) without direct
source-to-destination link availability. Specifically, a joint global-optimal
design for relay positioning and allocating power to source and relay is
proposed. For analytical insights, a novel low-complexity tight approximation
method is also presented. Selected numerical results validate the analysis and
quantify the comparative gains achieved using optimal power allocation (PA) and
relay placement (RP) strategies.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; accepted to IEEE Communications Letters 201
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