168,462 research outputs found

    Priority Preemption for Real-time Application QoS Guarantees in Cooperative Vehicular Networks

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    Inter-vehicle and roadside-to-vehicle communications can contribute to a safer and more efficient driving experience by providing time-sensitive and location-aware information. However, its performance suffers from vehicle mobility, intermittent user connectivity, and wireless channel unreliability. In this paper, we propose a novel cross-layer optimization approach based on our Adaptive Distributed Cooperative Medium Access Control (ADC-MAC) protocol to guarantee the quality-of-service (QoS) of real-time applications. Markov chain based theoretical analysis show that our proposed priority preemption approach can improve the quality of a real-time application by guaranteeing its bandwidth and reducing its transmission latency

    Modelling and Analysis of Smart Grids for Critical Data Communication

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    Practical models for the subnetworks of smart grid are presented and analyzed. Critical packet-delay bounds for these subnetworks are determined, with the overall objective of identifying parameters that would help in the design of smart grid with least end-to-end delay. A single-server non-preemptive queueing model with prioritized critical packets is presented for Home Area Network (HAN). Closed-form expressions for critical packet delay are derived and illustrated as a function of: i) critical packet arrival rate, ii) service rate, iii) utilization factor, and iv) rate of arrival of non-critical packets. Next, wireless HANs using FDMA and TDMA are presented. Upper and lower bounds on critical packet delay are derived in closed-form as functions of: i) average of signal-to interference-plus-noise ratio, ii) random channel scale, iii) transmitted power strength, iv) received power strength, v) number of EDs, vi) critical packet size, vii) number of channels, viii) path loss component, ix) distances between electrical devices and mesh client, x) channel interference range, xi) channel capacity, xii) bandwidth of the channel, and xiii) number of time/frequency slots. Analytical and simulation results show that critical packet delay is smaller for TDMA compared to FDMA. Lastly, an Intelligent Distributed Channel-Aware Medium Access Control (IDCA-MAC) protocol for wireless HAN using Distributed Coordination Function (DCF) is presented. The protocol eliminates collision and employs Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) system to enhance system performance. Simulation results show that critical packet delay can be reduced by nearly 20% using MA-Aware protocol compared to IDCA-MAC protocol. However, the latter is superior in terms throughput. A wireless mesh backbone network model for Neighbourhood Area Network (NAN) is presented for forwarding critical packets received from HAN to an identified gateway. The routing suggested is based on selected shortest path using Voronoi tessellation. CSMA/CA and CDMA protocols are considered and closed{form upper and lower bounds on critical packet delay are derived and examined as functions of i) signal-to-noise ratio, ii) signal interference, iii) critical packet size, iv) number of channels, v) channel interference range, vi) path loss components, vii) channel bandwidth, and viii) distance between MRs. The results show that critical packet delay to gateway using CDMA is lower compared to CSMA/CA protocol. A fiber optic Wide Area Network (WAN) is presented for transporting critical packets received from NAN to a control station. A Dynamic Fastest Routing Strategy (DFRS) algorithm is used for routing critical packets to control station. Closed-form expression for mean critical packet delay is derived and is examined as a function of: i) traffic intensity, ii) capacity of fiber links, iii) number of links, iv) variance of inter-arrival time, v) variance of service time, and vi) the latency of links. It is shown that delay of critical packets to control station meets acceptable standards set for smart grid

    Design of Media Access Control Schemes for Performance Enhancement of Future Generation Wireless Systems

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    Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) now provide connectivity to many businesses, homes and educational institutions. The wireless channel itself is plagued with numerous problems, such as it does not natively allow sharing of the wireless resource. WLAN devices utilize a complex medium access control (MAC) mechanism to allow multiple users to share the wireless resource. The distributed coordination function (DCF) is the most commonly used multiple access scheme in WLANs and a member of the 802.11 standard [1]. In this thesis, two major roles of MAC protocols are examined: maximizing network throughput and service differentiation. Firstly, a novel MAC scheme is proposed that makes use of Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output (MIMO) antenna technology to improve overall network throughput. The proposed MIMO-Aware MAC (MA-MAC) scheme utilizes the beamforming feature available in MIMO systems to allow two simultaneous transmissions of the wireless channel overlapped in time. This results in increased aggregate network throughput. This proposed scheme is shown to offer better throughput and delay performance versus existing MAC schemes proposed for simultaneous transmission. In addition, this MAC scheme is able to achieve this performance in a manner compatible with the existing standard. The latter part of this thesis proposes a new Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) based scheme for providing video, voice and data services (also known as the Triple-Play services) in a point-to-multipoint network. By dynamically allocating transmission slots, the proposed Television TDMA (TV-TDMA) scheme is shown to better meet delay requirements for video and voice traffic, and is able to achieve higher overall saturation throughput for best-effort traffic than existing Quality of Service enabled protocols

    Design of Media Access Control Schemes for Performance Enhancement of Future Generation Wireless Systems

    Get PDF
    Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) now provide connectivity to many businesses, homes and educational institutions. The wireless channel itself is plagued with numerous problems, such as it does not natively allow sharing of the wireless resource. WLAN devices utilize a complex medium access control (MAC) mechanism to allow multiple users to share the wireless resource. The distributed coordination function (DCF) is the most commonly used multiple access scheme in WLANs and a member of the 802.11 standard [1]. In this thesis, two major roles of MAC protocols are examined: maximizing network throughput and service differentiation. Firstly, a novel MAC scheme is proposed that makes use of Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output (MIMO) antenna technology to improve overall network throughput. The proposed MIMO-Aware MAC (MA-MAC) scheme utilizes the beamforming feature available in MIMO systems to allow two simultaneous transmissions of the wireless channel overlapped in time. This results in increased aggregate network throughput. This proposed scheme is shown to offer better throughput and delay performance versus existing MAC schemes proposed for simultaneous transmission. In addition, this MAC scheme is able to achieve this performance in a manner compatible with the existing standard. The latter part of this thesis proposes a new Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) based scheme for providing video, voice and data services (also known as the Triple-Play services) in a point-to-multipoint network. By dynamically allocating transmission slots, the proposed Television TDMA (TV-TDMA) scheme is shown to better meet delay requirements for video and voice traffic, and is able to achieve higher overall saturation throughput for best-effort traffic than existing Quality of Service enabled protocols

    Distributed SIR-Aware Opportunistic Access Control for D2D Underlaid Cellular Networks

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    In this paper, we propose a distributed interference and channel-aware opportunistic access control technique for D2D underlaid cellular networks, in which each potential D2D link is active whenever its estimated signal-to-interference ratio (SIR) is above a predetermined threshold so as to maximize the D2D area spectral efficiency. The objective of our SIR-aware opportunistic access scheme is to provide sufficient coverage probability and to increase the aggregate rate of D2D links by harnessing interference caused by dense underlaid D2D users using an adaptive decision activation threshold. We determine the optimum D2D activation probability and threshold, building on analytical expressions for the coverage probabilities and area spectral efficiency of D2D links derived using stochastic geometry. Specifically, we provide two expressions for the optimal SIR threshold, which can be applied in a decentralized way on each D2D link, so as to maximize the D2D area spectral efficiency derived using the unconditional and conditional D2D success probability respectively. Simulation results in different network settings show the performance gains of both SIR-aware threshold scheduling methods in terms of D2D link coverage probability, area spectral efficiency, and average sum rate compared to existing channel-aware access schemes.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, to be presented at IEEE GLOBECOM 201

    Distributed QoS Guarantees for Realtime Traffic in Ad Hoc Networks

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    In this paper, we propose a new cross-layer framework, named QPART ( QoS br>rotocol for Adhoc Realtime Traffic), which provides QoS guarantees to real-time multimedia applications for wireless ad hoc networks. By adapting the contention window sizes at the MAC layer, QPART schedules packets of flows according to their unique QoS requirements. QPART implements priority-based admission control and conflict resolution to ensure that the requirements of admitted realtime flows is smaller than the network capacity. The novelty of QPART is that it is robust to mobility and variances in channel capacity and imposes no control message overhead on the network
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