24,533 research outputs found
Energy-Efficient Data Collection in Heterogeneous Wireless Sensor and Actor Networks
© 2013 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Presented at the IEEE 52nd Conference on Decision and Control (CDC 2013), December 10-13, 2013, Florence, Italy.DOI: 10.1109/CDC.2013.6760528In this paper, we address the issue of activity
scheduling of sensors in heterogeneous wireless sensor and actor networks (WSANs), thereby proposing an energy-efficient data collection scheme in such networks. In order to extend the
lifetime of heterogeneous WSANs, sensors are activated and
deactivated under certain constraints throughout the network operations. Here, we propose a coordination framework in which actors exchange information with each other and decide
about the availability of redundant sensors that are eventually deactivated to save energy. In particular, let there be r
different types of sensors with each sensor observing a particular
sensing parameter. Under the initial deployment of sensors and actors within some field of observation, if an actor v receives
information regarding
k different sensing parameters, either
directly from sensors or through other actors, then our scheme determines a small subset of sensors that are sufficient to
provide information regarding the same k
sensing parameters to
v
An ant colony optimization approach for maximizing the lifetime of heterogeneous wireless sensor networks
Maximizing the lifetime of wireless sensor networks (WSNs) is a challenging problem. Although some methods exist to address the problem in homogeneous WSNs, research on this problem in heterogeneous WSNs have progressed at a slow pace. Inspired by the promising performance of ant colony optimization (ACO) to solve combinatorial problems, this paper proposes an ACO-based approach that can maximize the lifetime of heterogeneous WSNs. The methodology is based on finding the maximum number of disjoint connected covers that satisfy both sensing coverage and network connectivity. A construction graph is designed with each vertex denoting the assignment of a device in a subset. Based on pheromone and heuristic information, the ants seek an optimal path on the construction graph to maximize the number of connected covers. The pheromone serves as a metaphor for the search experiences in building connected covers. The heuristic information is used to reflect the desirability of device assignments. A local search procedure is designed to further improve the search efficiency. The proposed approach has been applied to a variety of heterogeneous WSNs. The results show that the approach is effective and efficient in finding high-quality solutions for maximizing the lifetime of heterogeneous WSNs
Accelerated collection of sensor data by mobility-enabled topology ranks
We study the problem of fast and energy-efficient data collection of sensory data using a mobile sink, in wireless sensor networks in which both the sensors and the sink move. Motivated by relevant applications, we focus on dynamic sensory mobility and heterogeneous sensor placement. Our approach basically suggests to exploit the sensor motion to adaptively propagate information based on local conditions (such as high placement concentrations), so that the sink gradually “learns” the network and accordingly optimizes its motion. Compared to relevant solutions in the state of the art (such as the blind random walk, biased walks, and even optimized deterministic sink mobility), our method significantly reduces latency (the improvement ranges from 40% for uniform placements, to 800% for heterogeneous ones), while also improving the success rate and keeping the energy dissipation at very satisfactory level
From carbon nanotubes and silicate layers to graphene platelets for polymer nanocomposites
In spite of extensive studies conducted on carbon nanotubes and silicate layers for their polymer-based nanocomposites, the rise of graphene now provides a more promising candidate due to its exceptionally high mechanical performance and electrical and thermal conductivities. The present study developed a facile approach to fabricate epoxy–graphene nanocomposites by thermally expanding a commercial product followed by ultrasonication and solution-compounding with epoxy, and investigated their morphologies, mechanical properties, electrical conductivity and thermal mechanical behaviour. Graphene platelets (GnPs) of 3.5
Sleep Deprivation Attack Detection in Wireless Sensor Network
Deployment of sensor network in hostile environment makes it mainly
vulnerable to battery drainage attacks because it is impossible to recharge or
replace the battery power of sensor nodes. Among different types of security
threats, low power sensor nodes are immensely affected by the attacks which
cause random drainage of the energy level of sensors, leading to death of the
nodes. The most dangerous type of attack in this category is sleep deprivation,
where target of the intruder is to maximize the power consumption of sensor
nodes, so that their lifetime is minimized. Most of the existing works on sleep
deprivation attack detection involve a lot of overhead, leading to poor
throughput. The need of the day is to design a model for detecting intrusions
accurately in an energy efficient manner. This paper proposes a hierarchical
framework based on distributed collaborative mechanism for detecting sleep
deprivation torture in wireless sensor network efficiently. Proposed model uses
anomaly detection technique in two steps to reduce the probability of false
intrusion.Comment: 7 pages,4 figures, IJCA Journal February 201
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