36 research outputs found

    Medium access control design for distributed opportunistic radio networks

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    Existing wireless networks are characterized by a fixed spectrum assignment policy. However, the scarcity of available spectrum and its inefficient usage demands for a new communication paradigm to exploit the existing spectrum opportunistically. Future Cognitive Radio (CR) devices should be able to sense unoccupied spectrum and will allow the deployment of real opportunistic networks. Still, traditional Physical (PHY) and Medium Access Control (MAC) protocols are not suitable for this new type of networks because they are optimized to operate over fixed assigned frequency bands. Therefore, novel PHY-MAC cross-layer protocols should be developed to cope with the specific features of opportunistic networks. This thesis is mainly focused on the design and evaluation of MAC protocols for Decentralized Cognitive Radio Networks (DCRNs). It starts with a characterization of the spectrum sensing framework based on the Energy-Based Sensing (EBS) technique considering multiple scenarios. Then, guided by the sensing results obtained by the aforementioned technique, we present two novel decentralized CR MAC schemes: the first one designed to operate in single-channel scenarios and the second one to be used in multichannel scenarios. Analytical models for the network goodput, packet service time and individual transmission probability are derived and used to compute the performance of both protocols. Simulation results assess the accuracy of the analytical models as well as the benefits of the proposed CR MAC schemes

    Distributed opportunistic scheduling algorithms for wireless communications.

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    In this thesis, we propose a number of distributed schemes for wireless communications in the cross layer design context, considering an uplink random access network in which multiple users communicate with a common base station. In addition, we perform a comprehensive study on a splitting based multiuser selection algorithm which is simple, effective, and scales with the network size. First, we investigate a reservation-type protocol in a channel aware ALOHA system. Various Markovian models are used to describe the system and to capture the temporal correlation of the channel evolution. The average throughput of the system is obtained using the Markov Analysis technique and we show that the reservation protocol can achieve better performance than the original channel-aware ALOHA by reducing the collision probability. Second, for better resource utilization in the Opportunistic Multichannel ALOHA scheme, we propose a simple extension to the transmission policy that exploits the idle channels. Performance analysis shows that, theoretically, the maximum system throughput can be improved by up to 63% in the asymptotic case. Through numerical results, it can be seen that a significant gain is achieved even when the system consists of a small number of users. Third, we consider a splitting based multiuser selection algorithm in a probabilistic view. Asymptotic analysis leads to a functional equation, similar to that encountered in the analysis of the collision resolution algorithm. Subject to some conditions, the solution of the functional equation can be obtained, which provides the approximations for the expected number of slots and the expected number of transmissions required by the algorithm in a large system. These results shed light on open design problems in choosing parameters for the algorithm when considering the delay and the overhead jointly. A typical example is to optimize the parameters that minimize the weighted sum of these measures of interest

    Stochastic geometry approach towards interference management and control in cognitive radio network : a survey

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    Interference management and control in the cognitive radio network (CRN) is a necessity if the activities of primary users must be protected from excessive interference resulting from the activities of neighboring users. Hence, interference experienced in wireless communication networks has earlier been characterized using the traditional grid model. Such models, however, lead to non-tractable analyses, which often require unrealistic assumptions, leading to inaccurate results. These limitations of the traditional grid models mean that the adoption of stochastic geometry (SG) continues to receive a lot of attention owing to its ability to capture the distribution of users properly, while producing scalable and tractable analyses for various performance metrics of interest. Despite the importance of CRN to next-generation networks, no survey of the existing literature has been done when it comes to SG-based interference management and control in the domain of CRN. Such a survey is, however, necessary to provide the current state of the art as well as future directions. This paper hence presents a comprehensive survey related to the use of SG to effect interference management and control in CRN. We show that most of the existing approaches in CRN failed to capture the relationship between the spatial location of users and temporal traffic dynamics and are only restricted to interference modeling among non-mobile users with full buffers. This survey hence encourages further research in this area. Finally, this paper provides open problems and future directions to aid in finding more solutions to achieve efficient and effective usage of the scarce spectral resources for wireless communications.The SENTECH Chair in Broadband Wireless Multimedia Communications (BWMC), Department of Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering, University of Pretoria, South Africa.http://www.elsevier.com/locate/comcomhj2022Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineerin

    Reliability and Quality of Service in Opportunistic Spectrum Access

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    RÉSUMÉ Les réseaux radio-cognitif constituent une des meilleures options technologiques pour les réseaux sans-fil futurs. Afin d’étudier comment la fiabilité devrait être redéfinie dans ces réseaux, nous étudions d'abord les sources les plus fréquentes de panne dans les réseaux sans-fil et fournissons une procédure systématique de classement des pannes. Il est ensuite expliqué comment les radios cognitives peuvent profiter de leur propre capacité à mettre en œuvre des mécanismes efficaces de prévention et de récupération contre les pannes et ainsi assurer des communications sans-fil fiables et de qualité de service constante. En considérant des normes arrivantes sur la base de l'OSA, ce qui distingue un réseau radio-cognitif de ses prédécesseurs est des changements fréquents de canal ainsi que de nouvelles exigences telles la détection de disponibilité et la décision d'utilisation du spectre. Nous nous concentrons sur cet aspect et modélisons la remise du spectre comme une panne. Par conséquent, améliorer la fiabilité est équivalent à augmenter le temps moyen entre pannes, à rendre plus efficace le processus de récupération et à réduire le temps moyen de réparation. Nous étudions donc d'abord l'impact du temps de récupération sur la performance du réseau radio-cognitif. En classifiant les pannes en dures et souples, il est examiné comment la disponibilité, le temps moyen entre pannes et le temps moyen jusqu'à la réparation sont touchés par le procès de récupération. Nous observons que le temps dépensé pour la récupération empêche le réseau d'atteindre le maximum de disponibilité. Par conséquent, pour obtenir un temps plus élevé entre pannes et un temps de réparation plus court, une option disponible est d'augmenter le nombre de canaux pouvant être utilisés par le réseau radio-cognitif, de sorte que, avec une haute probabilité, un utilisateur qui a raté le canal puisse trouver bientôt un nouveau canal. De l'autre côté, un mécanisme de récupération efficace est nécessaire pour mieux profiter de ce grand nombre de canaux; l'amélioration de la récupération est donc indispensable. Pour étudier l'impact de la récupération sur les couches plus hautes (e.g., la couche liaison et réseau), l’approche de l’analyse de file d'attente est choisie. Compte tenu des périodes de récupération comme une interruption de service, un modèle général de file d'attente de M/G/1 avec des interruptions est proposé. Différents paramètres de fiabilité et de qualité de service peuvent être trouvés à partir de ce modèle de file d'attente pour étudier comment la spécification des canaux, tels la distribution des périodes de disponibilité et d'indisponibilité, et la spécification de l'algorithme de récupération, tels la durée de récupération, affectent les paramètres de performance comme la perte de paquets, de retard et de gigue, et aussi le temps entre pannes. Pour soutenir la différenciation des classes de trafic, nous proposons une approche de file d'attente avec priorité. Nous proposons une extension des résultats du modèle de file d'attente générale et présentons quatre différentes disciplines de file d'attente de priorité, allant d'un régime préemptif absolu à un régime complètement non préemptif. Les nouvelles disciplines augmentent la flexibilité et la résolution de décision et permettent au noeud CR de contrôler l'interaction des différentes classes de trafic avec plus de précision.---------- ABSTRACT Cognitive-radio based wireless networks are a technology of choice for incoming wireless networks. To investigate how reliability should be redefined for these networks, we study the most common sources of failure in wireless networks and provide a systematic failure classification procedure. It is then explained how cognitive radios can use their inherent capabilities to implement efficient prevention and recovery mechanisms to combat failures and thereby provide more reliable communications and consistent quality of service in wireless networks. Considering incoming OSA-based standards, what distinguishes a cognitive radio network from its predecessors is the frequent spectrum handovers along with new requirements such as spectrum sensing and spectrum usage decision. We thus focus on this aspect and model the spectrum handover as a failure, so improving the reliability is equivalent to increasing the mean time to failure, improving the recovery process and shortening the mean time to repair. We first study the impact of the recovery time on the performance of the cognitive radio network. By classifying the failures into hard and soft, it is investigated how the availability, mean time to failure and mean time to repair are affected by the recovery time. It is observed that the time spent for recovery prevents the network from reaching the maximum availability. Therefore, to achieve a high mean time to hard failure and low mean time to repair, an available option is to increase the number of channels, so that with a high probability, a user who missed the channel can soon find a new channel. On the other side, an efficient recovery scheme is required to better take advantage of a large number of channels. Recovery improvement is thus indispensable. To study the impact of recovery on higher communication layers, a queueing approach is chosen. Considering the recovery periods as a service interruption, a general M/G/1 queueing model with interruption is proposed. Different reliability and quality of service parameters can be found from this queueing model to investigate how channel parameters, such as availability and unavailability periods, and the recovery algorithm specifications, such as the recovery duration, affect packet loss, delay and jitter, and also the MTTF and MTTR for hard and soft failures. To support traffic differentiation, we suggest a priority queueing approach. We extend the results of the general queueing model and discuss four different priority queueing disciplines ranging from a pure preemptive scheme to a pure non-preemptive scheme. New disciplines increase the flexibility and decision resolution and enable the CR node to more accurately control the interaction of different classes of traffic. The models are solved, so it can be analyzed how the reliability and quality of service parameters, such as delay and jitter, for a specific class of traffic are affected not only by the channel parameters, but also by the characteristics of other traffic classes. The M/G/1 queueing model with interruptions is a foundation for performance analysis and an answer to the need of having closed-form analytical relations. We then extend the queueing model to more realistic scenarios, first with heterogeneous channels (heterogeneous service rate for different channels) and second with multiple users and a random medium access model

    Energy and Spectral Efficient Wireless Communications

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    Energy and spectrum are two precious commodities for wireless communications. How to improve the energy and spectrum efficiency has become two critical issues for the designs of wireless communication systems. This dissertation is devoted to the development of energy and spectral efficient wireless communications. The developed techniques can be applied to a wide range of wireless communication systems, such as wireless sensor network (WSN) designed for structure health monitoring (SHM), medium access control (MAC) for multi-user systems, and cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio systems. First, to improve the energy efficiency in SHM WSN, a new ultra low power (ULP) WSN is proposed to monitor the vibration properties of structures such as buildings, bridges, and the wings and bodies of aircrafts. The new scheme integrates energy harvesting, data sensing, and wireless communication into a unified process, and it achieves significant energy savings compared to existing WSNs. Second, a cross-layer collision tolerant (CT) MAC scheme is proposed to improve energy and spectral efficiency in a multi-user system with shared medium. When two users transmit simultaneously over a shared medium, a collision happens at the receiver. Conventional MAC schemes will discard the collided signals, which result in a waste of the precious energy and spectrum resources. In our proposed CT-MAC scheme, each user transmits multiple weighted replicas of a packet at randomly selected data slots in a frame, and the indices of the selected slots are transmitted in a special collision-free position slot at the beginning of each frame. Collisions of the data slots in the MAC layer are resolved by using multiuser detection (MUD) in the PHY layer. Compared to existing schemes, the proposed CT-MAC scheme can support more simultaneous users with a higher throughput. Third, a new cooperative spectrum sensing scheme is proposed to improve the energy and spectral efficiency of a cognitive radio network. A new Slepian-Wolf coded cooperation scheme is proposed for a cognitive radio network with two secondary users (SUs) performing cooperative spectrum sensing through a fusion center (FC). The proposed scheme can achieve significant performance gains compared to existing schemes

    Mobile Ad Hoc Networks

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    Guiding readers through the basics of these rapidly emerging networks to more advanced concepts and future expectations, Mobile Ad hoc Networks: Current Status and Future Trends identifies and examines the most pressing research issues in Mobile Ad hoc Networks (MANETs). Containing the contributions of leading researchers, industry professionals, and academics, this forward-looking reference provides an authoritative perspective of the state of the art in MANETs. The book includes surveys of recent publications that investigate key areas of interest such as limited resources and the mobility of mobile nodes. It considers routing, multicast, energy, security, channel assignment, and ensuring quality of service. Also suitable as a text for graduate students, the book is organized into three sections: Fundamentals of MANET Modeling and Simulation—Describes how MANETs operate and perform through simulations and models Communication Protocols of MANETs—Presents cutting-edge research on key issues, including MAC layer issues and routing in high mobility Future Networks Inspired By MANETs—Tackles open research issues and emerging trends Illustrating the role MANETs are likely to play in future networks, this book supplies the foundation and insight you will need to make your own contributions to the field. It includes coverage of routing protocols, modeling and simulations tools, intelligent optimization techniques to multicriteria routing, security issues in FHAMIPv6, connecting moving smart objects to the Internet, underwater sensor networks, wireless mesh network architecture and protocols, adaptive routing provision using Bayesian inference, and adaptive flow control in transport layer using genetic algorithms
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