1,374 research outputs found
Controllable radio interference for experimental and testing purposes in wireless sensor networks
AbstractâWe address the problem of generating customized, controlled interference for experimental and testing purposes in Wireless Sensor Networks. The known coexistence problems between electronic devices sharing the same ISM radio band drive the design of new solutions to minimize interference. The validation of these techniques and the assessment of protocols under external interference require the creation of reproducible and well-controlled interference patterns on real nodes, a nontrivial and time-consuming task. In this paper, we study methods to generate a precisely adjustable level of interference on a specific channel, with lowcost equipment and rapid calibration. We focus our work on the platforms carrying the CC2420 radio chip and we show that, by setting such transceiver in special mode, we can quickly and easily generate repeatable and precise patterns of interference. We show how this tool can be extremely useful for researchers to quickly investigate the behaviour of sensor network protocols and applications under different patterns of interference, and we further evaluate its performance
Towards efficient coexistence of IEEE 802.15.4e TSCH and IEEE 802.11
A major challenge in wide deployment of smart wireless devices, using
different technologies and sharing the same 2.4 GHz spectrum, is to achieve
coexistence across multiple technologies. The IEEE~802.11 (WLAN) and the IEEE
802.15.4e TSCH (WSN) where designed with different goals in mind and both play
important roles for respective applications. However, they cause mutual
interference and degraded performance while operating in the same space. To
improve this situation we propose an approach to enable a cooperative control
which type of network is transmitting at given time, frequency and place.
We recognize that TSCH based sensor network is expected to occupy only small
share of time, and that the nodes are by design tightly synchronized. We
develop mechanism enabling over-the-air synchronization of the Wi-Fi network to
the TSCH based sensor network. Finally, we show that Wi-Fi network can avoid
transmitting in the "collision periods". We provide full design and show
prototype implementation based on the Commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) devices.
Our solution does not require changes in any of the standards.Comment: 8 page
The Triangle Metric: Fast Link Quality Estimation for Mobile Wireless Sensor Networks (Invited Paper)
ReSensesuppleCONE
Survey on wireless technology trade-offs for the industrial internet of things
Aside from vast deployment cost reduction, Industrial Wireless Sensor and Actuator Networks (IWSAN) introduce a new level of industrial connectivity. Wireless connection of sensors and actuators in industrial environments not only enables wireless monitoring and actuation, it also enables coordination of production stages, connecting mobile robots and autonomous transport vehicles, as well as localization and tracking of assets. All these opportunities already inspired the development of many wireless technologies in an effort to fully enable Industry 4.0. However, different technologies significantly differ in performance and capabilities, none being capable of supporting all industrial use cases. When designing a network solution, one must be aware of the capabilities and the trade-offs that prospective technologies have. This paper evaluates the technologies potentially suitable for IWSAN solutions covering an entire industrial site with limited infrastructure cost and discusses their trade-offs in an effort to provide information for choosing the most suitable technology for the use case of interest. The comparative discussion presented in this paper aims to enable engineers to choose the most suitable wireless technology for their specific IWSAN deployment
Wireless body sensor networks for health-monitoring applications
This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an article accepted for publication in
Physiological Measurement. The publisher is
not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version
derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0967-3334/29/11/R01
Innovative energy-efficient wireless sensor network applications and MAC sub-layer protocols employing RTS-CTS with packet concatenation
of energy-efficiency as well as the number of available applications. As a consequence there
are challenges that need to be tackled for the future generation of WSNs. The research work
from this Ph.D. thesis has involved the actual development of innovative WSN applications contributing
to different research projects. In the Smart-Clothing project contributions have been
given in the development of a Wireless Body Area Network (WBAN) to monitor the foetal movements
of a pregnant woman in the last four weeks of pregnancy. The creation of an automatic
wireless measurement system for remotely monitoring concrete structures was an contribution
for the INSYSM project. This was accomplished by using an IEEE 802.15.4 network enabling for
remotely monitoring the temperature and humidity within civil engineering structures. In the
framework of the PROENEGY-WSN project contributions have been given in the identification
the spectrum opportunities for Radio Frequency (RF) energy harvesting through power density
measurements from 350 MHz to 3 GHz. The design of the circuits to harvest RF energy
and the requirements needed for creating a WBAN with electromagnetic energy harvesting and
Cognitive Radio (CR) capabilities have also been addressed. A performance evaluation of the
state-of-the art of the hardware WSN platforms has also been addressed. This is explained by
the fact that, even by using optimized Medium Access Control (MAC) protocols, if the WSNs
platforms do not allow for minimizing the energy consumption in the idle and sleeping states,
energy efficiency and long network lifetime will not be achieved.
The research also involved the development of new innovative mechanisms that tries and solves
overhead, one of the fundamental reasons for the IEEE 802.15.4 standard MAC inefficiency. In
particular, this Ph.D. thesis proposes an IEEE 802.15.4 MAC layer performance enhancement by
employing RTS/CTS combined with packet concatenation. The results have shown that the use
of the RTS/CTS mechanism improves channel efficiency by decreasing the deferral time before
transmitting a data packet. In addition, the Sensor Block Acknowledgment MAC (SBACK-MAC)
protocol has been proposed that allows the aggregation of several acknowledgment responses
in one special Block Acknowledgment (BACK) Response packet. Two different solutions are
considered. The first one considers the SBACK-MAC protocol in the presence of BACK Request
(concatenation) while the second one considers the SBACK-MAC in the absence of BACK Request
(piggyback). The proposed solutions address a distributed scenario with single-destination and
single-rate frame aggregation. The throughput and delay performance is mathematically derived
under both ideal conditions (a channel environment with no transmission errors) and non
ideal conditions (a channel environment with transmission errors). An analytical model is proposed,
capable of taking into account the retransmission delays and the maximum number of
backoff stages. The simulation results successfully validate our analytical model. For more
than 7 TX (aggregated packets) all the MAC sub-layer protocols employing RTS/CTS with packet
concatenation allows for the optimization of channel use in WSNs, v8-48 % improvement in the
maximum average throughput and minimum average delay, and decrease energy consumption
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