414 research outputs found

    IEEE 802.15.4 for wireless sensor networks: a technical overview

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    Low-rate low-power consumption and low-cost communication are the key points that lead to the specification of the IEEE 802.15.4 standard. This paper overviews the technical features of the physical layer and the medium access control sublayer mechanisms of the IEEE 802.15.4 protocol that are most relevant for wireless sensor network applications. We also discuss the ability of IEEE 802.15.4 to fulfil the requirements of wireless sensor network applications

    Analyzing Delay in Wireless Multi-hop Heterogeneous Body Area Networks

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    With increase in ageing population, health care market keeps growing. There is a need for monitoring of health issues. Wireless Body Area Network (WBAN) consists of wireless sensors attached on or inside human body for monitoring vital health related problems e.g, Electro Cardiogram (ECG), Electro Encephalogram (EEG), ElectronyStagmography (ENG) etc. Due to life threatening situations, timely sending of data is essential. For data to reach health care center, there must be a proper way of sending data through reliable connection and with minimum delay. In this paper transmission delay of different paths, through which data is sent from sensor to health care center over heterogeneous multi-hop wireless channel is analyzed. Data of medical related diseases is sent through three different paths. In all three paths, data from sensors first reaches ZigBee, which is the common link in all three paths. Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN), Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX), Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS) are connected with ZigBee. Each network (WLAN, WiMAX, UMTS) is setup according to environmental conditions, suitability of device and availability of structure for that device. Data from these networks is sent to IP-Cloud, which is further connected to health care center. Delay of data reaching each device is calculated and represented graphically. Main aim of this paper is to calculate delay of each link in each path over multi-hop wireless channel.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1208.240

    Analysis of IEEE 802.15.4 Beacon-Enabled MAC Protocol

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    This paper aims to develop several mathematical models to study medium access control (MAC) protocol in the IEEE 802.15.4 beacon-enabled mode with star topology. In particular, the MAC protocol which employs a slotted carrier-sense multiple access with collision avoidance (CSMA/CA) algorithm used in the contention access period (CAP) of a superframe is modelled. The analysis studies the effectiveness of the CSMA/CA algorithm and provides explicit mathematical expressions for power consumption, access delay, and data frame drop probability. The proposed models precisely follow CSMA/CA algorithm in MAC protocol of beacon-enabled mode and differ from those previously published in the literature as 1) they are derived based on data frame generation rate of end devices, 2) they provide a completed expression for frame access delay, and 3) lowpower states of end devices are considered for power efficiency evaluations. The paper shows how power consumption of end devices is improved on the balance with data frame delay. The validity of the proposed models is confirmed and complemented by extensive simulations

    IEEE 802.15.4 MAC Protocol Study and Improvement

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    IEEE 802.15.4 is a standard used for low rate personal area networks (PANs). It offers device level connectivity in applications with limited ower and relaxed throughput requirements. Devices with IEEE 802.15.4 technology can be used in many potential applications, such as home networking, industry/environments monitoring, healthcare equipments, etc, due to its extremely low power features. Although the superframe beacons play the key role in synchronizing channel access in IEEE 802.15.4, they are sources for energy inefficiency. This research focuses on exploring how to optimize the beacons, and designing novel schemes to distribute the information that are supposed to be delivered to a subset of PAN devices. In this work, an acknowledgement based scheme is proposed to reduce the energy consumption in the distribution of guaranteed time slot (GTS) descriptors. Based on the observation that the superframe beacon frame has global impact on all PAN devices, an energy-efficient channel reservation scheme is presented to deliver the information (GTS descriptors and pending addresses). In addition, the problem of channel underutilization is studied in the contention free period. To address the problem, a new GTS allocation scheme is proposed to improve the bandwidth utilization

    An Energy Efficient Mac Layer Design for Wireless Sensor Network

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    Recent technological advances in sensors, low power integrated circuits, and wireless communications have enabled the design of low-cost, lightweight, and intelligent wireless sensor nodes. The IEEE 802.15.4 standard is a specific Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN) standard designed for various wireless sensor applications. Idle listening, packet collision, control packet overhead and overhearing are considered as energy consuming resources in WSNs. As the idle listening and packet collision are two major power consuming parts, we considered two solutions for reducing both of them to achieve an energy efficient protocol. We concentrate on the MAC layer design to overcome the energy consumption by radio management procedure and the backoff exponent mechanism. In the radio management, we analyze the contention part of the active duration of the MAC IEEE 802.15.4 standard superframe and allow nodes to enter the sleep state regarding to their available data for transmission instead of staying awake for the entire active period. This method will be useful especially when sensors do not have any data to send. The proposed non-persistent Carrier Sense Multiple Access (np-CSMA) protocol employs backoff exponent management mechanism. This algorithm helps the network to be reliable under traffic changes and saves more energy by avoiding collision. It assigns different range of BE (backoff exponent) to each node with respect to node’s contribution in network traffic. In our scheme a coordinator can observe the network traffic due to the data information associated with devices. It can manage the Personal Area Networks (PANs) devices by the beacon packet to go to sleep mode when they do not have any packet to send. In this thesis, by using the sleep period together with backoff exponent management in our protocol design, the amount of energy consumption will be reduced. The proposed model has been compared to original 802.15.4 standard and the existing Adaptive Backoff Exponent (ABE) MAC protocol to illustrate the improvement. Moreover, the BE management algorithm derives better system performance such as end-to-end delay, throughput, packet delivery ratio and Link Quality Indicator (LQI). The proposed model has been designed in such a way that the introduction of extra sleep period inserted in superframe improves the energy efficiency while maintaining other system performance parameters. The proposed MAC protocol has improved the energy consumption around 60% as compared to ABE-MAC. The proposed MAC protocol with an extra radio management technique together with backoff management procedure can achieve 70% more energy saving than MAC IEEE 802.15.4 standard

    IEEE 802.15.4: a Federating Communication Protocol for Time-Sensitive Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) have been attracting increasing interests for developing a new generation of embedded systems with great potential for many applications such as surveillance, environment monitoring, emergency medical response and home automation. However, the communication paradigms in WSNs differ from the ones attributed to traditional wireless networks, triggering the need for new communication protocols. In this context, the recently standardised IEEE 802.15.4 protocol presents some potentially interesting features for deployment in wireless sensor network applications, such as power-efficiency, timeliness guarantees and scalability. Nevertheless, when addressing WSN applications with (soft/hard) timing requirements some inherent paradoxes emerge, such as power-efficiency versus timeliness, triggering the need of engineering solutions for an efficient deployment of IEEE 802.15.4 in WSNs. In this technical report, we will explore the most relevant characteristics of the IEEE 802.15.4 protocol for wireless sensor networks and present the most important challenges regarding time-sensitive WSN applications. We also provide some timing performance and analysis of the IEEE 802.15.4 that unveil some directions for resolving the previously mentioned paradoxes
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