964 research outputs found
Wireless industrial monitoring and control networks: the journey so far and the road ahead
While traditional wired communication technologies have played a crucial role in industrial monitoring and control networks over the past few decades, they are increasingly proving to be inadequate to meet the highly dynamic and stringent demands of today’s industrial applications, primarily due to the very rigid nature of wired infrastructures. Wireless technology, however, through its increased pervasiveness, has the potential to revolutionize the industry, not only by mitigating the problems faced by wired solutions, but also by introducing a completely new class of applications. While present day wireless technologies made some preliminary inroads in the monitoring domain, they still have severe limitations especially when real-time, reliable distributed control operations are concerned. This article provides the reader with an overview of existing wireless technologies commonly used in the monitoring and control industry. It highlights the pros and cons of each technology and assesses the degree to which each technology is able to meet the stringent demands of industrial monitoring and control networks. Additionally, it summarizes mechanisms proposed by academia, especially serving critical applications by addressing the real-time and reliability requirements of industrial process automation. The article also describes certain key research problems from the physical layer communication for sensor networks and the wireless networking perspective that have yet to be addressed to allow the successful use of wireless technologies in industrial monitoring and control networks
An Upper Bound on Multi-hop Transmission Capacity with Dynamic Routing Selection
This paper develops upper bounds on the end-to-end transmission capacity of
multi-hop wireless networks. Potential source-destination paths are dynamically
selected from a pool of randomly located relays, from which a closed-form lower
bound on the outage probability is derived in terms of the expected number of
potential paths. This is in turn used to provide an upper bound on the number
of successful transmissions that can occur per unit area, which is known as the
transmission capacity. The upper bound results from assuming independence among
the potential paths, and can be viewed as the maximum diversity case. A useful
aspect of the upper bound is its simple form for an arbitrary-sized network,
which allows insights into how the number of hops and other network parameters
affect spatial throughput in the non-asymptotic regime. The outage probability
analysis is then extended to account for retransmissions with a maximum number
of allowed attempts. In contrast to prevailing wisdom, we show that
predetermined routing (such as nearest-neighbor) is suboptimal, since more hops
are not useful once the network is interference-limited. Our results also make
clear that randomness in the location of relay sets and dynamically varying
channel states is helpful in obtaining higher aggregate throughput, and that
dynamic route selection should be used to exploit path diversity.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted to IEEE Transactions on Information
Theory, 201
Caching Gain in Wireless Networks with Fading: A Multi-User Diversity Perspective
We consider the effect of caching in wireless networks where fading is the
dominant channel effect. First, we propose a one-hop transmission strategy for
cache-enabled wireless networks, which is based on exploiting multi-user
diversity gain. Then, we derive a closed-form result for throughput scaling of
the proposed scheme in large networks, which reveals the inherent trade-off
between cache memory size and network throughput. Our results show that
substantial throughput improvements are achievable in networks with sources
equipped with large cache size. We also verify our analytical result through
simulations.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, conferenc
Information-theoretic Capacity of Clustered Random Networks
We analyze the capacity scaling laws of clustered ad hoc networks in which
nodes are distributed according to a doubly stochastic shot-noise Cox process.
We identify five different operational regimes, and for each regime we devise a
communication strategy that allows to achieve a throughput to within a
poly-logarithmic factor (in the number of nodes) of the maximum theoretical
capacity.Comment: 6 pages, in Proceedings of ISIT 201
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