2,216 research outputs found
Design of in-building wireless networks deployments using evolutionary algorithms
In this article, a novel approach to deal with the design of in-building wireless networks deployments is proposed. This approach known as MOQZEA (Multiobjective Quality Zone Based Evolutionary Algorithm) is a hybr id evolutionary algorithm adapted to use a novel fitness function, based on the definition of quality zones for the different objective functions considered. This approach is conceived to solve wireless network design problems without previous information of the required number of transmitters, considering simultaneously a high number of objective functions and optimizing multiple configuration parameters of the transmitters
A novel design approach for NB-IoT networks using hybrid teaching-learning optimization
In this paper, we present and address the problem of designing green LTE networks with Internet of Things (IoT) nodes. We consider the new NarrowBand-IoT (NB-IoT) wireless technology that will emerge in current and future access networks. The main objective is to reduce power consumption by responding to the instantaneous bit rate demand by the user and the IoT node. In this context, we apply emerging evolutionary algorithms to the above problem. More specifically, we apply the Teaching-Learning-Optimization (TLBO), the Jaya algorithm, and a hybrid algorithm. This hybrid algorithm named TLBO-Jaya uses concepts from both algorithms in an effective way. We compare and discuss the preliminary results of these algorithms
Movement-Efficient Sensor Deployment in Wireless Sensor Networks With Limited Communication Range.
We study a mobile wireless sensor network (MWSN) consisting of multiple
mobile sensors or robots. Three key factors in MWSNs, sensing quality, energy
consumption, and connectivity, have attracted plenty of attention, but the
interaction of these factors is not well studied. To take all the three factors
into consideration, we model the sensor deployment problem as a constrained
source coding problem. %, which can be applied to different coverage tasks,
such as area coverage, target coverage, and barrier coverage. Our goal is to
find an optimal sensor deployment (or relocation) to optimize the sensing
quality with a limited communication range and a specific network lifetime
constraint. We derive necessary conditions for the optimal sensor deployment in
both homogeneous and heterogeneous MWSNs. According to our derivation, some
sensors are idle in the optimal deployment of heterogeneous MWSNs. Using these
necessary conditions, we design both centralized and distributed algorithms to
provide a flexible and explicit trade-off between sensing uncertainty and
network lifetime. The proposed algorithms are successfully extended to more
applications, such as area coverage and target coverage, via properly selected
density functions. Simulation results show that our algorithms outperform the
existing relocation algorithms
An (MI)LP-based Primal Heuristic for 3-Architecture Connected Facility Location in Urban Access Network Design
We investigate the 3-architecture Connected Facility Location Problem arising
in the design of urban telecommunication access networks. We propose an
original optimization model for the problem that includes additional variables
and constraints to take into account wireless signal coverage. Since the
problem can prove challenging even for modern state-of-the art optimization
solvers, we propose to solve it by an original primal heuristic which combines
a probabilistic fixing procedure, guided by peculiar Linear Programming
relaxations, with an exact MIP heuristic, based on a very large neighborhood
search. Computational experiments on a set of realistic instances show that our
heuristic can find solutions associated with much lower optimality gaps than a
state-of-the-art solver.Comment: This is the authors' final version of the paper published in:
Squillero G., Burelli P. (eds), EvoApplications 2016: Applications of
Evolutionary Computation, LNCS 9597, pp. 283-298, 2016. DOI:
10.1007/978-3-319-31204-0_19. The final publication is available at Springer
via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-31204-0_1
Reliable cost-optimal deployment of wireless sensor networks
Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) technology is currently considered one of the key technologies for realizing the Internet of Things (IoT). Many of the important WSNs applications are critical in nature such that the failure of the WSN to carry out its required tasks can have serious detrimental effects. Consequently, guaranteeing that the WSN functions satisfactorily during its intended mission time, i.e. the WSN is reliable, is one of the fundamental requirements of the network deployment strategy. Achieving this requirement at a minimum deployment cost is particularly important for critical applications in which deployed SNs are equipped with expensive hardware. However, WSN reliability, defined in the traditional sense, especially in conjunction with minimizing the deployment cost, has not been considered as a deployment requirement in existing WSN deployment algorithms to the best of our knowledge. Addressing this major limitation is the central focus of this dissertation. We define the reliable cost-optimal WSN deployment as the one that has minimum deployment cost with a reliability level that meets or exceeds a minimum level specified by the targeted application. We coin the problem of finding such deployments, for a given set of application-specific parameters, the Minimum-Cost Reliability-Constrained Sensor Node Deployment Problem (MCRC-SDP). To accomplish the aim of the dissertation, we propose a novel WSN reliability metric which adopts a more accurate SN model than the model used in the existing metrics. The proposed reliability metric is used to formulate the MCRC-SDP as a constrained combinatorial optimization problem which we prove to be NP-Complete. Two heuristic WSN deployment optimization algorithms are then developed to find high quality solutions for the MCRC-SDP. Finally, we investigate the practical realization of the techniques that we developed as solutions of the MCRC-SDP. For this purpose, we discuss why existing WSN Topology Control Protocols (TCPs) are not suitable for managing such reliable cost-optimal deployments. Accordingly, we propose a practical TCP that is suitable for managing the sleep/active cycles of the redundant SNs in such deployments. Experimental results suggest that the proposed TCP\u27s overhead and network Time To Repair (TTR) are relatively low which demonstrates the applicability of our proposed deployment solution in practice
- …