14,784 research outputs found
Multiflow Transmission in Delay Constrained Cooperative Wireless Networks
This paper considers the problem of energy-efficient transmission in
multi-flow multihop cooperative wireless networks. Although the performance
gains of cooperative approaches are well known, the combinatorial nature of
these schemes makes it difficult to design efficient polynomial-time algorithms
for joint routing, scheduling and power control. This becomes more so when
there is more than one flow in the network. It has been conjectured by many
authors, in the literature, that the multiflow problem in cooperative networks
is an NP-hard problem. In this paper, we formulate the problem, as a
combinatorial optimization problem, for a general setting of -flows, and
formally prove that the problem is not only NP-hard but it is
inapproxmiable. To our knowledge*, these results provide
the first such inapproxmiablity proof in the context of multiflow cooperative
wireless networks. We further prove that for a special case of k = 1 the
solution is a simple path, and devise a polynomial time algorithm for jointly
optimizing routing, scheduling and power control. We then use this algorithm to
establish analytical upper and lower bounds for the optimal performance for the
general case of flows. Furthermore, we propose a polynomial time heuristic
for calculating the solution for the general case and evaluate the performance
of this heuristic under different channel conditions and against the analytical
upper and lower bounds.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Algorithmic Aspects of Energy-Delay Tradeoff in Multihop Cooperative Wireless Networks
We consider the problem of energy-efficient transmission in delay constrained
cooperative multihop wireless networks. The combinatorial nature of cooperative
multihop schemes makes it difficult to design efficient polynomial-time
algorithms for deciding which nodes should take part in cooperation, and when
and with what power they should transmit. In this work, we tackle this problem
in memoryless networks with or without delay constraints, i.e., quality of
service guarantee. We analyze a wide class of setups, including unicast,
multicast, and broadcast, and two main cooperative approaches, namely: energy
accumulation (EA) and mutual information accumulation (MIA). We provide a
generalized algorithmic formulation of the problem that encompasses all those
cases. We investigate the similarities and differences of EA and MIA in our
generalized formulation. We prove that the broadcast and multicast problems
are, in general, not only NP hard but also o(log(n)) inapproximable. We break
these problems into three parts: ordering, scheduling and power control, and
propose a novel algorithm that, given an ordering, can optimally solve the
joint power allocation and scheduling problems simultaneously in polynomial
time. We further show empirically that this algorithm used in conjunction with
an ordering derived heuristically using the Dijkstra's shortest path algorithm
yields near-optimal performance in typical settings. For the unicast case, we
prove that although the problem remains NP hard with MIA, it can be solved
optimally and in polynomial time when EA is used. We further use our algorithm
to study numerically the trade-off between delay and power-efficiency in
cooperative broadcast and compare the performance of EA vs MIA as well as the
performance of our cooperative algorithm with a smart noncooperative algorithm
in a broadcast setting.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Wireless Power Transfer and Data Collection in Wireless Sensor Networks
In a rechargeable wireless sensor network, the data packets are generated by
sensor nodes at a specific data rate, and transmitted to a base station.
Moreover, the base station transfers power to the nodes by using Wireless Power
Transfer (WPT) to extend their battery life. However, inadequately scheduling
WPT and data collection causes some of the nodes to drain their battery and
have their data buffer overflow, while the other nodes waste their harvested
energy, which is more than they need to transmit their packets. In this paper,
we investigate a novel optimal scheduling strategy, called EHMDP, aiming to
minimize data packet loss from a network of sensor nodes in terms of the nodes'
energy consumption and data queue state information. The scheduling problem is
first formulated by a centralized MDP model, assuming that the complete states
of each node are well known by the base station. This presents the upper bound
of the data that can be collected in a rechargeable wireless sensor network.
Next, we relax the assumption of the availability of full state information so
that the data transmission and WPT can be semi-decentralized. The simulation
results show that, in terms of network throughput and packet loss rate, the
proposed algorithm significantly improves the network performance.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figures, accepted to IEEE Transactions on Vehicular
Technolog
Maximum Multipath Routing Throughput in Multirate Wireless Mesh Networks
In this paper, we consider the problem of finding the maximum routing
throughput between any pair of nodes in an arbitrary multirate wireless mesh
network (WMN) using multiple paths. Multipath routing is an efficient technique
to maximize routing throughput in WMN, however maximizing multipath routing
throughput is a NP-complete problem due to the shared medium for
electromagnetic wave transmission in wireless channel, inducing collision-free
scheduling as part of the optimization problem. In this work, we first provide
problem formulation that incorporates collision-free schedule, and then based
on this formulation we design an algorithm with search pruning that jointly
optimizes paths and transmission schedule. Though suboptimal, compared to the
known optimal single path flow, we demonstrate that an efficient multipath
routing scheme can increase the routing throughput by up to 100% for simple
WMNs.Comment: This paper has been accepted for publication in IEEE 80th Vehicular
Technology Conference, VTC-Fall 201
- …