153 research outputs found
Uncoordinated access schemes for the IoT: approaches, regulations, and performance
Internet of Things (IoT) devices communicate using a variety of protocols,
differing in many aspects, with the channel access method being one of the most
important. Most of the transmission technologies explicitly designed for IoT
and Machine-to-Machine (M2M) communication use either an ALOHA-based channel
access or some type of Listen Before Talk (LBT) strategy, based on carrier
sensing. In this paper, we provide a comparative overview of the uncoordinated
channel access methods for IoT technologies, namely ALOHA-based and LBT
schemes, in relation with the ETSI and FCC regulatory frameworks. Furthermore,
we provide a performance comparison of these access schemes, both in terms of
successful transmissions and energy efficiency, in a typical IoT deployment.
Results show that LBT is effective in reducing inter-node interference even for
long-range transmissions, though the energy efficiency can be lower than that
provided by ALOHA methods. The adoption of rate-adaptation schemes,
furthermore, lowers the energy consumption while improving the fairness among
nodes at different distances from the receiver. Coexistence issues are also
investigated, showing that in massive deployments LBT is severely affected by
the presence of ALOHA devices in the same area
Low-latency Networking: Where Latency Lurks and How to Tame It
While the current generation of mobile and fixed communication networks has
been standardized for mobile broadband services, the next generation is driven
by the vision of the Internet of Things and mission critical communication
services requiring latency in the order of milliseconds or sub-milliseconds.
However, these new stringent requirements have a large technical impact on the
design of all layers of the communication protocol stack. The cross layer
interactions are complex due to the multiple design principles and technologies
that contribute to the layers' design and fundamental performance limitations.
We will be able to develop low-latency networks only if we address the problem
of these complex interactions from the new point of view of sub-milliseconds
latency. In this article, we propose a holistic analysis and classification of
the main design principles and enabling technologies that will make it possible
to deploy low-latency wireless communication networks. We argue that these
design principles and enabling technologies must be carefully orchestrated to
meet the stringent requirements and to manage the inherent trade-offs between
low latency and traditional performance metrics. We also review currently
ongoing standardization activities in prominent standards associations, and
discuss open problems for future research
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