458 research outputs found

    Wireless industrial monitoring and control networks: the journey so far and the road ahead

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    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

    Energy Efficiency in Communications and Networks

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    The topic of "Energy Efficiency in Communications and Networks" attracts growing attention due to economical and environmental reasons. The amount of power consumed by information and communication technologies (ICT) is rapidly increasing, as well as the energy bill of service providers. According to a number of studies, ICT alone is responsible for a percentage which varies from 2% to 10% of the world power consumption. Thus, driving rising cost and sustainability concerns about the energy footprint of the IT infrastructure. Energy-efficiency is an aspect that until recently was only considered for battery driven devices. Today we see energy-efficiency becoming a pervasive issue that will need to be considered in all technology areas from device technology to systems management. This book is seeking to provide a compilation of novel research contributions on hardware design, architectures, protocols and algorithms that will improve the energy efficiency of communication devices and networks and lead to a more energy proportional technology infrastructure

    Correlation-based Cross-layer Communication in Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Wireless sensor networks (WSN) are event based systems that rely on the collective effort of densely deployed sensor nodes continuously observing a physical phenomenon. The spatio-temporal correlation between the sensor observations and the cross-layer design advantages are significant and unique to the design of WSN. Due to the high density in the network topology, sensor observations are highly correlated in the space domain. Furthermore, the nature of the energy-radiating physical phenomenon constitutes the temporal correlation between each consecutive observation of a sensor node. This unique characteristic of WSN can be exploited through a cross-layer design of communication functionalities to improve energy efficiency of the network. In this thesis, several key elements are investigated to capture and exploit the correlation in the WSN for the realization of advanced efficient communication protocols. A theoretical framework is developed to capture the spatial and temporal correlations in WSN and to enable the development of efficient communication protocols. Based on this framework, spatial Correlation-based Collaborative Medium Access Control (CC-MAC) protocol is described, which exploits the spatial correlation in the WSN in order to achieve efficient medium access. Furthermore, the cross-layer module (XLM), which melts common protocol layer functionalities into a cross-layer module for resource-constrained sensor nodes, is developed. The cross-layer analysis of error control in WSN is then presented to enable a comprehensive comparison of error control schemes for WSN. Finally, the cross-layer packet size optimization framework is described.Ph.D.Committee Chair: Ian F. Akyildiz; Committee Member: Douglas M. Blough; Committee Member: Mostafa Ammar; Committee Member: Raghupathy Sivakumar; Committee Member: Ye (Geoffrey) L

    Optimising lower layers of the protocol stack to improve communication performance in a wireless temperature sensor network

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    The function of wireless sensor networks is to monitor events or gather information and report the information to a sink node, a central location or a base station. It is a requirement that the information is transmitted through the network efficiently. Wireless communication is the main activity that consumes energy in wireless sensor networks through idle listening, overhearing, interference and collision. It becomes essential to limit energy usage while maintaining communication between the sensor nodes and the sink node as the nodes die after the battery has been exhausted. Thus, conserving energy in a wireless sensor network is of utmost importance. Numerous methods to decrease energy expenditure and extend the lifetime of the network have been proposed. Researchers have devised methods to efficiently utilise the limited energy available for wireless sensor networks by optimising the design parameters and protocols. Cross-layer optimisation is an approach that has been employed to improve wireless communication. The essence of cross-layer scheme is to optimise the exchange and control of data between two or more layers to improve efficiency. The number of transmissions is therefore a vital element in evaluating overall energy usage. In this dissertation, a Markov Chain model was employed to analyse the tuning of two layers of the protocol stack, namely the Physical Layer (PHY) and Media Access Control layer (MAC), to find possible energy gains. The study was conducted utilising the IEEE 802.11 channel, SensorMAC (SMAC) and Slotted-Aloha (S-Aloha) medium access protocols in a star topology Wireless Temperature Sensor Network (WTSN). The research explored the prospective energy gains that could be realised through optimizing the Forward Error Correction (FEC) rate. Different Reed Solomon codes were analysed to explore the effect of protocol tuning on energy efficiency, namely transmission power, modulation method, and channel access. The case where no FEC code was used and analysed as the control condition. A MATLAB simulation model was used to identify the statistics of collisions, overall packets transmitted, as well as the total number of slots used during the transmission phase. The bit error probability results computed analytically were utilised in the simulation model to measure the probability of successful transmitting data in the physical layer. The analytical values and the simulation results were compared to corroborate the correctness of the models. The results indicate that energy gains can be accomplished by the suggested layer tuning approach.Electrical and Mining EngineeringM. Tech. (Electrical Engineering

    Error Control in Wireless Sensor Networks: A Cross Layer Analysis

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    Error control is of significant importance for Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) because of their severe energy constraints and the low power communication requirements. In this paper, a cross-layer methodology for the analysis of error control schemes in WSNs is presented such that the effects of multi-hop routing and the broadcast nature of the wireless channel are investigated. More specifically, the cross-layer effects of routing, medium access, and physical layers are considered. This analysis enables a comprehensive comparison of forward error correction (FEC) codes, automatic repeat request (ARQ), and hybrid ARQ schemes in WSNs. The validation results show that the developed framework closely follows simulation results. Hybrid ARQ and FEC schemes improve the error resiliency of communication compared to ARQ. In a multi-hop network, this improvement can be exploited by constructing longer hops (hop length extension), which can be achieved through channel-aware routing protocols, or by reducing the transmit power (transmit power control). The results of our analysis reveal that for hybrid ARQ schemes and certain FEC codes, the hop length extension decreases both the energy consumption and the end-to-end latency subject to a target packet error rate (PER) compared to ARQ. This decrease in end-to-end latency is crucial for delay sensitive, real-time applications, where both hybrid ARQ and FEC codes are strong candidates. We also show that the advantages of FEC codes are even more pronounced as the network density increases. On the other hand, transmit power control results in significant savings in energy consumption at the cost of increased latency for certain FEC codes. The results of our analysis also indicate the cases where ARQ outperforms FEC codes for various end-to-end distance and target PER values

    NOMA-based 802.11g/n: PHY analysis and MAC implementation

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    Industry 4.0 can be considered as the industrial revolution of the current century. Among others, one of its main objectives is the replacement of wired communications by wireless connectivity. The idea is to overcome the main drawbacks of the current wired ecosystem: the lack of mobility, the deployment costs, cable damage and the difficulties with scalability. However, for this purpose, the nature and requirements of the industrial applications must be taken into account, in particular, the proposed communications protocols must support very low loss rates and a strong robustness against failures. This is a very challenging condition due to the nature of the industrial environments (interference with other communication systems, reflections with metallic objects ...). In addition, another characteristic of the industrial applications is the strict requirement related to the latency. On the other hand, industrial applications are not only based on high challenging services, but also exist more flexible requirement applications, such as, web browser, email, video content or complementary information. Those services are considered Best Effort (BE) services. Eventually, in some wireless applications both critical and BE services have to be offered. For those cases, Non-Orthogonal Multiplexing Access (NOMA) technology together with the IEEE 802.11g/n standard is proposed in this document as the physical layer solution. The IEEE 802.11g/n standard has been modified in order to accommodate NOMA schemes, and then, comprehensive simulations are conducted to check and analyze the behavior of the proposed system. It has been determined that through NOMA technology it is possible to obtain better results in certain cases than those achieved in a transmission cases that implements the IEEE 802.11g/n standard in TDM/FDM basis

    Energy Savings via Harnessing Partial Packets in Body Area Networks

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    This work considers the incorporation, implications and potential energy savings of partial packet recovery schemes in Body Area Networks (BANs). Received packets which have not been fully corrected by the physical layer, called partial, are discarded by the vast majority of BAN protocols, as opposed to valid packets, which satisfy the error detection check and are propagated to higher layers. In typical networks using ARQ protocols, dropping partial packets results in retransmissions. However, because these packets contain useful information, partial packet recovery schemes have been proposed with demonstrated throughput and reliability benefits, targeting mostly wireless LANs. In order to quantify the potential energy benefits of harnessing partial packets in BANs, we use an experimental setup with four sensors mounted on a human body, transmitting information to a receiving node in a typical office environment. By precisely modeling the state transitions and energy consumption of sensors, we compare the efficiency of a baseline ARQ protocol against a scheme which leverages information in partial packets. Our results indicate that exploiting partial packets reduces on average the energy consumption of our sensors by 8--20%. The energy savings are pronounced in challenged channel conditions of high PER, where they can be up to 50%
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