2 research outputs found

    A Novel Survey Analysis on Energy-Aware Routing Protocols for Manet Applications

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    MANET system applications in today situation consumes larger amounts of energy this energy becomes an important parameter and scarce resource in MANETS This energy consumption has to be reduced and harvested in the communication devices for efficient usage of energy and power Different energy aware and harvesting strategies have been devised using various protocols to achieve the reduction and minimised usage of the available energy and power resources This paper surveys and illustrates the differences of various Energy aware Routing Protocol used in MANETS based on the matrices used These protocols provide some awareness in optimizing the Energy and Power Resources and limit the consumption when nodes are idle This intern increases the life time of the node and improves the performance widely investigating the energy efficiency protocols for adhoc infrastructure less MANET environmen

    Route discovery schemes in Mobile Ad hoc Networks with variable-range transmission power

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    Broadcasting in MANETs is important for route discovery but consumes significant amounts of power that is difficult to renew for devices that rely heavily on batteries. Most existing routing protocols make use of a broadcast scheme known as simple flooding. In such an on-demand routing protocol (e.g. AODV) the source node originates a Route Request (RREQ) packet that is blindly rebroadcast via neighbouring nodes to all nodes in the network. Simple flooding leads to serious redundancy, together with contention, and collisions, which is often called the broadcast storm problem. This thesis proposes two improvement strategies: topology control (adjusting transmission power) and reduced retransmissions (reducing redundant rebroadcasts) to reduce energy consumption. For energy efficient route discovery the main idea is to reduce the energy consumed per broadcast during route discovery. An Energy Efficient Adaptive Forwarding Algorithm (called EEAFA) is proposed to reduce the impact of RREQ packet flooding in on-demand routing protocols. The algorithm operates in two phases: 1) Topology construction phase, which establishes a more scalable and energy efficient network structure where nodes can adjust their transmission power range dynamically, based on their local density. 2) A Forwarding Node Determination phase, that utilises network information provided by the constructed topology, where nodes independently decide to forward a RREQ packet or not without relying on GPS or any distance calculations. A further Enhanced EEAFA (called E-EEAFA) algorithm is also proposed, which combines two techniques: graph colouring and sectoring techniques. Graph colouring increases awareness at network nodes to improve the determination of a forwarding node, while the sectoring technique divides neighbours into different forwarding sectors. This helps to reduce overlap between forwarding nodes and select suitable nodes in each sector to forward RREQ packets. These techniques are employed in a distributed manner and collaborate to reduce the number of forwarding nodes, which thus reduces the volume of RREQ packets populating the network. These algorithms have been validated as effective by NS2 simulation studies that are detailed in the thesis
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