8 research outputs found

    The sound of communication in underwater acoustic sensor networks: (Position paper)

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    Underwater environments have never been much of a constraint to the rich animal life they support at all depths of our seas and oceans. Indeed, nature has taken advantage of this environment to develop a rich variety of efficient communication strategies through evolutionary change and adaptation. The wealth of knowledge to be discovered will continue to dazzle and fascinate the world. For underwater sensor network communication, acoustic signalling is the preferred choice for designers because sound propagation is the most efficient when compared to other forms, like thermal, light, and electromagnetic. It is within this acoustic environment that researchers have to innovate and develop new ideas and methodologies so as to advance the state-of-the-art. In this paper, several fundamental issues and connections are discussed that arise in the study of underwater wireless sensor networks. A variety of ideas and solutions for further research is proposed and fundamental issues in topology control, directional underwater transducers, and monitoring and surveillance are disc

    Wireless Communication in Data Centers: A Survey

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    Data centers (DCs) is becoming increasingly an integral part of the computing infrastructures of most enterprises. Therefore, the concept of DC networks (DCNs) is receiving an increased attention in the network research community. Most DCNs deployed today can be classified as wired DCNs as copper and optical fiber cables are used for intra- and inter-rack connections in the network. Despite recent advances, wired DCNs face two inevitable problems; cabling complexity and hotspots. To address these problems, recent research works suggest the incorporation of wireless communication technology into DCNs. Wireless links can be used to either augment conventional wired DCNs, or to realize a pure wireless DCN. As the design spectrum of DCs broadens, so does the need for a clear classification to differentiate various design options. In this paper, we analyze the free space optical (FSO) communication and the 60 GHz radio frequency (RF), the two key candidate technologies for implementing wireless links in DCNs. We present a generic classification scheme that can be used to classify current and future DCNs based on the communication technology used in the network. The proposed classification is then used to review and summarize major research in this area. We also discuss open questions and future research directions in the area of wireless DCs

    High-Performance Broadcast and Multicast Protocols for Multi-Radio Multi-Channel Wireless Mesh Networks

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    Recently, wireless mesh networks (WMNs) have attracted much attention. A vast amount of unicast, multicast and broadcast protocols has been developed for WMNs or mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs). First of all, broadcast and multicast in wireless networks are fundamentally different from the way in which wired networks function due to the well-known wireless broadcast/multicast advantage. Moreover, most broadcast and multicast protocols in wireless networks assume a single-radio single-channel and single-rate network model, or a generalized physical model, which does not take into account the impact of interference. This dissertation focuses on high-performance broadcast and multicast protocols designed for multi-radio multi-channel (MRMC) WMNs. MRMC increases the capacity of the network from different aspects. Multi-radio allows mesh nodes to simultaneously send and receive through different radios to its neighbors. Multi-channel allows channels to be reused across the network, which expands the available spectrum and reduces the interference. Unlike MANETs, WMNs are assumed to be static or with minimal mobility. Therefore, the main design goal in WMNs is to achieve high throughput rather than to maintain connectivity. The capacity of WMNs is constrained by the interference caused by the neighbor nodes. One direct design objective is to minimize or reduce the interference in broadcast and multicast. This dissertation presents a set of broadcast and multicast protocols and mathematical formulations to achieve the design goal in MRMC WMNs. First, the broadcast problem is addressed with full consideration of both inter-node and intra-node interference to achieve efficient broadcast. The interference-aware broadcast protocol simultaneously achieves full reliability, minimum broadcast or multicast latency, minimum redundant transmissions, and high throughput. With an MRMC WMN model, new link and channel quality metrics are defined and are suitable for the design of broadcast and multicast protocols. Second, the minimum cost broadcast problem (MCBP), or minimum number of transmissions problem, is studied for MRMC WMNs. Minimum cost broadcast potentially allows more effective and efficient schedule algorithms to be designed. The proposed protocol with joint consideration of channel assignment reduces the interference to improve the throughput in the MCBP. Minimum cost broadcast in MRMC WMNs is very different from that in the single radio single channel scenario. The channel assignment in MRMC WMNs is used to assign multiple radios of every node to different channels. It determines the actual network connectivity since adjacent nodes have to be assigned to a common channel. Transmission on different channels makes different groups of neighboring nodes, and leads to different interference. Moreover, the selection of channels by the forward nodes impacts on the number of radios needed for broadcasting. Finally, the interference optimization multicast problem in WMNs with directional antennas is discussed. Directional transmissions can greatly reduce radio interference and increase spatial reuse. The interference with directional transmissions is defined for multicast algorithm design. Multicast routing found by the interference-aware algorithm tends to have fewer channel collisions. The research work presented in this dissertation concludes that (1) new and practical link and channel metrics are required for designing broadcast and multicast in MRMC WMNs; (2) a small number of radios is sufficient to significantly improve throughput of broadcast and multicast in WMNs; (3) the number of channels has more impact on almost all performance metrics, such as the throughput, the number of transmission, and interference, in WMNs

    Wireless Communication in Data Centers: A Survey

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    Impact of directional antennas on routing and neighbor discovery in wireless ad-hoc networks

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    Wireless ad-hoc networks are data networks that are deployed without a fixed infrastructure nor central controllers such as access points or base stations. In these networks, data packets are forwarded directly to the destination node if they are within the transmission range of the sender or sent through a multi-hop path of intermediary nodes that act as relays. This paradigm where a fixed infrastructure is not needed, is tolerant to topology changes and allows a fast deployment have been considered as a promissory technology that is suitable for a large number of network implementations, such as mobile hand-held devices, wireless sensors, disaster recovery networks, etc. Recently, smart directional antennas have been identified as a robust technology that can boost the performance of wireless ad-hoc networks in terms of coverage, connectivity, and capacity. Contrary to omnidirectional antennas, which can radiate energy in all directions, directional antennas can focus the energy in a specific direction, extending the coverage range for the same power level. Longer ranges provide shorter paths to destination nodes and also improve connectivity. Moreover, directional antennas can reduce the number of collisions in a contention-based access scheme as they can steer the main lobe in the desired direction and set nulls in all the others, thereby they minimize the co-channel interference and reduce the noise level. Connections are more reliable due to the increased link stability and spatial diversity. Shorter paths, as well as alternative paths, are also available as a consequence of the use of directional antennas. All these features combined results in a higher network capacity. Most of the previous research has focused on adapting the existing medium access control and routing protocols to utilize directional communications. This research work is novel because it improves the neighbor discovery process as it allows to discover nodes in the second neighborhood of a given node using a gossip based procedure and by sharing the relative position information obtained during this stage with the routing protocol with the aim of reducing the number of hops between source and destination. We have also developed a model to evaluate the energy consumed by the nodes when smart directional antennas are used in the ad-hoc network. This study has demonstrated that by adapting the beamwidth of the antennas nodes are able to reach furthest nodes and consequently, reduce the number of hops between source and destination. This fact not only reduces the end-to-end delay and improves the network throughput but also reduces the average energy consumed by the whole network

    Optical Wireless Data Center Networks

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    Bandwidth and computation-intensive Big Data applications in disciplines like social media, bio- and nano-informatics, Internet-of-Things (IoT), and real-time analytics, are pushing existing access and core (backbone) networks as well as Data Center Networks (DCNs) to their limits. Next generation DCNs must support continuously increasing network traffic while satisfying minimum performance requirements of latency, reliability, flexibility and scalability. Therefore, a larger number of cables (i.e., copper-cables and fiber optics) may be required in conventional wired DCNs. In addition to limiting the possible topologies, large number of cables may result into design and development problems related to wire ducting and maintenance, heat dissipation, and power consumption. To address the cabling complexity in wired DCNs, we propose OWCells, a class of optical wireless cellular data center network architectures in which fixed line of sight (LOS) optical wireless communication (OWC) links are used to connect the racks arranged in regular polygonal topologies. We present the OWCell DCN architecture, develop its theoretical underpinnings, and investigate routing protocols and OWC transceiver design. To realize a fully wireless DCN, servers in racks must also be connected using OWC links. There is, however, a difficulty of connecting multiple adjacent network components, such as servers in a rack, using point-to-point LOS links. To overcome this problem, we propose and validate the feasibility of an FSO-Bus to connect multiple adjacent network components using NLOS point-to-point OWC links. Finally, to complete the design of the OWC transceiver, we develop a new class of strictly and rearrangeably non-blocking multicast optical switches in which multicast is performed efficiently at the physical optical (lower) layer rather than upper layers (e.g., application layer). Advisors: Jitender S. Deogun and Dennis R. Alexande

    Throughput Characterizations of Wireless Networks via Stochastic Geometry and Random Graph Theory

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    The shared medium of wireless communication networks presents many technical challenges that offer a rich modeling and design space across both physical and scheduling protocol layers. This dissertation is organized into tasks that characterize the throughput performance in such networks, with a secondary focus on the interference models employed therein. We examine the throughput ratio of greedy maximal scheduling (GMS) in wireless communication networks modeled as random graphs. A throughput ratio is a single-parameter characterization of the largest achievable fraction of the network capacity region. The throughput ratio of GMS is generally very difficult to obtain; however, it may be evaluated or bounded based on specific topology structures. We analyze the GMS throughput ratio in previously unexplored random graph families under the assumption of primary interference. Critical edge densities are shown to yield bounds on the range and expected GMS throughput ratio as the network grows large. We next focus on the increasing interest in the use of directional antennas to improve throughput in wireless networks. We propose a model for capturing the effects of antenna misdirection on coverage and throughput in large-scale directional networks within a stochastic geometry framework. We provide explicit expressions for communication outage as a function of network density and antenna beamwidth for idealized sector antenna patterns. These expressions are then employed in optimizations to maximize the spatial density of successful transmissions under ideal sector antennas. We supplement our analytical findings with numerical trends across more realistic antenna patterns. Finally, we characterize trade-offs between the protocol and physical interference models, each used in the prior tasks. A transmission is successful under the protocol model if the receiver is free of any single, significant interferer, while physical model feasibility accounts for multiple interference sources. The protocol model, parameterized by a guard zone radius, naturally forms a decision rule for estimating physical model feasibility. We combine binary hypothesis testing with stochastic geometry and characterize the guard zone achieving minimum protocol model prediction error. We conclude with guidelines for identifying environmental parameter regimes for which the protocol model is well suited as a proxy for the physical model.Ph.D., Electrical Engineering -- Drexel University, 201
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