74 research outputs found

    A distributed delay-efficient data aggregation scheduling for duty-cycled WSNs

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    With the growing interest in wireless sensor networks (WSNs), minimizing network delay and maximizing sensor (node) lifetime are important challenges. Since the sensor battery is one of the most precious resources in a WSN, efficient utilization of the energy to prolong the network lifetime has been the focus of much of the research on WSNs. For that reason, many previous research efforts have tried to achieve tradeoffs in terms of network delay and energy cost for such data aggregation tasks. Recently, duty-cycling technique, i.e., periodically switching ON and OFF communication and sensing capabilities, has been considered to significantly reduce the active time of sensor nodes and thus extend network lifetime. However, this technique causes challenges for data aggregation. In this paper, we present a distributed approach, named distributed delay efficient data aggregation scheduling (DEDAS-D) to solve the aggregation-scheduling problem in duty-cycled WSNs. The analysis indicates that our solution is a better approach to solve this problem. We conduct extensive simulations to corroborate our analysis and show that DEDAS-D outperforms other distributed schemes and achieves an asymptotic performance compared with centralized scheme in terms of data aggregation delay.N/

    Communication protocols for energy constrained networks

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    A Survey on Energy-Efficient Strategies in Static Wireless Sensor Networks

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    A comprehensive analysis on the energy-efficient strategy in static Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) that are not equipped with any energy harvesting modules is conducted in this article. First, a novel generic mathematical definition of Energy Efficiency (EE) is proposed, which takes the acquisition rate of valid data, the total energy consumption, and the network lifetime of WSNs into consideration simultaneously. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that the EE of WSNs is mathematically defined. The energy consumption characteristics of each individual sensor node and the whole network are expounded at length. Accordingly, the concepts concerning EE, namely the Energy-Efficient Means, the Energy-Efficient Tier, and the Energy-Efficient Perspective, are proposed. Subsequently, the relevant energy-efficient strategies proposed from 2002 to 2019 are tracked and reviewed. Specifically, they respectively are classified into five categories: the Energy-Efficient Media Access Control protocol, the Mobile Node Assistance Scheme, the Energy-Efficient Clustering Scheme, the Energy-Efficient Routing Scheme, and the Compressive Sensing--based Scheme. A detailed elaboration on both of the basic principle and the evolution of them is made. Finally, further analysis on the categories is made and the related conclusion is drawn. To be specific, the interdependence among them, the relationships between each of them, and the Energy-Efficient Means, the Energy-Efficient Tier, and the Energy-Efficient Perspective are analyzed in detail. In addition, the specific applicable scenarios for each of them and the relevant statistical analysis are detailed. The proportion and the number of citations for each category are illustrated by the statistical chart. In addition, the existing opportunities and challenges facing WSNs in the context of the new computing paradigm and the feasible direction concerning EE in the future are pointed out

    Enhanced collision avoidance mechanisms for wireless sensor networks through high accuracy collision modeling

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    Wireless channel and multi-hop communications cause a significant number of packet collisions in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). Although a collision may cause packet loss and reduce network performance, low-power wireless transceivers allow packet reception in the presence of collisions if at least one signal can provide a sufficiently high power compared with other signals. Therefore, with respect to the large number of nodes used in WSNs, which necessitates the use of simulation for protocol development, collisions should be addressed at two layers: First, collisions should be modeled at the physical layer through a high-accuracy packet reception algorithm that decides about packet reception in the presence of collisions. Second, collision avoidance mechanisms should be employed at the Medium Access Control (MAC) layer to reduce packet losses caused by collisions. Unfortunately, the existing packet reception algorithms exhibit low accuracy and impede the development of efficient collision avoidance mechanisms. From the collision avoidance perspective, existing contention-based MAC protocols do not provide reliable packet broadcasting, thereby affecting the initialization performance of WSNs. In addition, despite the benefits of schedule-based MAC protocols during the data-gathering phase, the existing mechanisms rely on unrealistic assumptions. The first major contribution of this work is CApture Modeling Algorithm (CAMA), which enables collision modeling with high accuracy and efficiency at the physical layer. The higher accuracy of CAMA against existing approaches is validated through extensive comparisons with empirical experiments. The second major contribution includes mechanisms that improve the reliability of packet broadcasting. In particular, adaptive contention window adjustment mechanisms and the Geowindow algorithm are proposed for collision avoidance during the initialization phases. These mechanisms considerably improve the accuracy of the initialization phases, without violating duration and energy efficiency requirements. As the third major contribution, a distributed and concurrent link-scheduling algorithm (called DICSA) is proposed for collision avoidance during the data-gathering phase. DICSA provides faster slot assignment, higher spatial reuse and lower energy consumption, compared with existing algorithms. Furthermore, evaluating DICSA within a MAC protocol confirms its higher throughput, higher delivery ratio, and lower end-to-end delay

    A Sleep-Scheduling-Based Cross-Layer Design Approach for Application-Specific Wireless Sensor Networks

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    The pervasiveness and operational autonomy of mesh-based wireless sensor networks (WSNs) make them an ideal candidate in offering sustained monitoring functions at reasonable cost over a wide area. To extend the functional lifetime of battery-operated sensor nodes, stringent sleep scheduling strategies with communication duty cycles running at sub-1% range are expected to be adopted. Although ultra-low communication duty cycles can cast a detrimental impact on sensing coverage and network connectivity, its effects can be mitigated with adaptive sleep scheduling, node deployment redundancy and multipath routing within the mesh WSN topology. This work proposes a cross-layer organizational approach based on sleep scheduling, called Sense-Sleep Trees (SS-Trees), that aims to harmonize the various engineering issues and provides a method to extend monitoring capabilities and operational lifetime of mesh-based WSNs engaged in wide-area surveillance applications. Various practical considerations such as sensing coverage requirements, duty cycling, transmission range assignment, data messaging, and protocol signalling are incorporated to demonstrate and evaluate the feasibility of the proposed design approach

    A framework for multimodal wireless sensor networks

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    Wireless Sensor Networks are a widely used solution for monitoring oriented applications (e.g., water quality on watersheds, pollution monitoring in cities). These kinds of applications are characterized by the necessity of two data-reporting modes: time-driven and event-driven. The former is used mainly for continually supervising an area and the latter for event detection and tracking. By switching between both modes, a WSN can improve its energy-efficiency and event reporting latency, compared to single data-reporting schemes. We refer to those WSNs, where both data-reporting modes are required simultaneously, as MultiModal Wireless Sensor Networks (M2WSNs). M2WSNs arise as a solution for the trade-off between energy savings and event reporting latency in those monitoring-oriented applications where regular and emergency reporting are required simultaneously. The multimodality in these M2WSNs allows sensor nodes to perform data-reporting in two possible schemes, time-driven and event-driven, according to the circumstances, providing higher energy savings and better reporting results when compared to traditional schemes. Traditionally, sophisticated power-aware wake-up schemes have been employed to achieve energy efficiency in WSNs, such as low-duty cycling protocols using a single radio architecture. These protocols achieve good results regarding energy savings, but they suffer from idle-listening and overhearing issues, that make them not reliable for most ultra-low-power demanding applications, especially, those deployed in hostile and unattended environments. Currently, Wake-up Radio Receivers based protocols, under a dual-radio architecture and always-on operation, are emerging as a solution to overcome these issues, promising higher energy consumption reduction and reliability in terms of latency and packet-delivery-ratio compared to classic wake-up protocols. By combining different transceivers and reporting protocols regarding energy efficiency and reliability, multimodality in M2WSNs is achieved. This dissertation proposes a conceptual framework for M2WSNs that integrates the goodness of both data-reporting schemes and the Wake-up Radio paradigm--data periodicity, responsiveness, and energy-efficiency--, that might be suitable for monitoring oriented applications with low bandwidth requirements, that operates under normal circumstances and emergencies. The framework follows a layered approach, where each layer aims to fulfill specific tasks based on its information, the functions provided by its adjacent layers, and the information resulted from the cross-layer interactions.Doctor en IngenieríaDoctoradohttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1346-6451https://scholar.google.com.co/citations?user=0I4kXQUAAAAJ&hl=enhttps://scienti.minciencias.gov.co/cvlac/visualizador/generarCurriculoCv.do?cod_rh=000001365

    Wireless Sensor Networks

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    The aim of this book is to present few important issues of WSNs, from the application, design and technology points of view. The book highlights power efficient design issues related to wireless sensor networks, the existing WSN applications, and discusses the research efforts being undertaken in this field which put the reader in good pace to be able to understand more advanced research and make a contribution in this field for themselves. It is believed that this book serves as a comprehensive reference for graduate and undergraduate senior students who seek to learn latest development in wireless sensor networks

    Energy and quality scalable wireless communication

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2003.Includes bibliographical references (p. 165-171).Nodes for emerging, high-density wireless networks will face the dual challenges of continuous, multi-year operation under diverse and challenging operating conditions. The wireless communication subsystem, a substantial consumer of energy, must therefore be designed with unprecedented energy efficiency. To meet this challenge, inefficiencies once overlooked must be addressed, and the system must be designed for energy scalability, the use of graceful energy vs. quality trade-offs in response to continuous variations in operational conditions. Using a comprehensive model framework that unifies cross-disciplinary models for energy consumption and communication performance, this work explores multi-dimensional trade-offs of energy and quality for wireless communication at all levels of the system hierarchy. The circuit-level "knob" of dynamic voltage scaling is implemented on a commercial microprocessor and integrated into a power aware, prototype microsensor node. Power aware abstractions encourage collaboration between the hardware, which fundamentally dissipates the energy, and software, which controls how the hardware behaves. Accurate models of hardware energy consumption reveal inefficiencies of routing techniques such as multihop, and the models are fused with information-theoretic limits on code performance to bound the energy scalability of the hardware platform. An application-specific protocol for microsensor networks is evaluated with a new, interactive Java simulation tool created expressly for energy-conscious, high density wireless networks. Close collaboration between software and hardware layers, and across the research disciplines that compose wireless communication itself, are crucial enablers for energy-efficient wireless communication.by Rex Kee Min.Ph.D
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