2,506 research outputs found
PSA: The Packet Scheduling Algorithm for Wireless Sensor Networks
The main cause of wasted energy consumption in wireless sensor networks is
packet collision. The packet scheduling algorithm is therefore introduced to
solve this problem. Some packet scheduling algorithms can also influence and
delay the data transmitting in the real-time wireless sensor networks. This
paper presents the packet scheduling algorithm (PSA) in order to reduce the
packet congestion in MAC layer leading to reduce the overall of packet
collision in the system The PSA is compared with the simple CSMA/CA and other
approaches using network topology benchmarks in mathematical method. The
performances of our PSA are better than the standard (CSMA/CA). The PSA
produces better throughput than other algorithms. On other hand, the average
delay of PSA is higher than previous works. However, the PSA utilizes the
channel better than all algorithms
Energy Harvesting Wireless Communications: A Review of Recent Advances
This article summarizes recent contributions in the broad area of energy
harvesting wireless communications. In particular, we provide the current state
of the art for wireless networks composed of energy harvesting nodes, starting
from the information-theoretic performance limits to transmission scheduling
policies and resource allocation, medium access and networking issues. The
emerging related area of energy transfer for self-sustaining energy harvesting
wireless networks is considered in detail covering both energy cooperation
aspects and simultaneous energy and information transfer. Various potential
models with energy harvesting nodes at different network scales are reviewed as
well as models for energy consumption at the nodes.Comment: To appear in the IEEE Journal of Selected Areas in Communications
(Special Issue: Wireless Communications Powered by Energy Harvesting and
Wireless Energy Transfer
Impact of Correlated Mobility on Delay-Throughput Performance in Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks
AbstractâWe extend the analysis of the scaling laws of wireless ad hoc networks to the case of correlated nodes movements, which are commonly found in real mobility processes. We consider a simple version of the Reference Point Group Mobility model, in which nodes belonging to the same group are constrained to lie in a disc area, whose center moves uniformly across the network according to the i.i.d. model. We assume fast mobility conditions, and take as primary goal the maximization of pernode throughput. We discover that correlated node movements have huge impact on asymptotic throughput and delay, and can sometimes lead to better performance than the one achievable under independent nodes movements. I. INTRODUCTION AND RELATED WORK In the last few years the store-carry-forward communication paradigm, which allows nodes to physically carry buffered dat
Throughput Optimal Flow Allocation on Multiple Paths for Random Access Wireless Multi-hop Networks
In this paper we consider random access wireless multi-hop mesh networks with
multi-packet reception capabilities where multiple flows are forwarded to the
gateways through node disjoint paths. We address the issue of aggregate
throughput-optimal flow rate allocation with bounded delay guarantees. We
propose a distributed flow rate allocation scheme that formulates flow rate
allocation as an optimization problem and derive the conditions for
non-convexity for an illustrative topology. We also employ a simple model for
the average aggregate throughput achieved by all flows that captures both
intra- and inter-path interference. The proposed scheme is evaluated through
NS-2 simulations. Our preliminary results are derived from a grid topology and
show that the proposed flow allocation scheme slightly underestimates the
average aggregate throughput observed in two simulated scenarios with two and
three flows respectively. Moreover it achieves significantly higher average
aggregate throughput than single path utilization in two different traffic
scenarios examined.Comment: Accepted for publication at the 9th IEEE BROADBAND WIRELESS ACCESS
WORKSHOP (BWA2013), IEEE Globecom 2013 Workshop
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