242 research outputs found

    Efficient Management of Multicast Traffic in Directional mmWave Networks

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    Multicasting is becoming more and more important in the Internet of Things (IoT) and wearable applications (e.g., high definition video streaming, virtual reality gaming, public safety, among others) that require high bandwidth efficiency and low energy consumption. In this regard, millimeter wave (mmWave) communications can play a crucial role to efficiently disseminate large volumes of data as well as to enhance the throughput gain in fifth-generation (5G) and beyond networks. There are, however, challenges to face in view of providing multicast services with high data rates under the conditions of short propagation range caused by high path loss at mmWave frequencies. Indeed, the strong directionality required at extremely high frequency bands excludes the possibility of serving all multicast users via a single transmission. Therefore, multicasting in directional systems consists of a sequence of beamformed transmissions to serve all multicast group members, subgroup by subgroup. This paper focuses on multicast data transmission optimization in terms of throughput and, hence, of the energy efficiency of resource-constrained devices such as wearables, running their resource-hungry applications. In particular, we provide a means to perform the beam switching and propose a radio resource management (RRM) policy that can determine the number and width of the beams required to deliver the multicast content to all interested users. Achieved simulation results show that the proposed RRM policy significantly improves network throughput with respect to benchmark approaches. It also achieves a high gain in energy efficiency over unicast and multicast with fixed predefined beams.acceptedVersionPeer reviewe

    A Remote Capacity Utilization Estimator for WLANs

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    In WLANs, the capacity of a node is not fixed and can vary dramatically due to the shared nature of the medium under the IEEE 802.11 MAC mechanism. There are two main methods of capacity estimation in WLANs: Active methods based upon probing packets that consume the bandwidth of the channel and do not scale well. Passive methods based upon analyzing the transmitted packets that avoid the overhead of transmitting probe packets and perform with greater accuracy. Furthermore, passive methods can be implemented locally or remotely. Local passive methods require an additional dissemination mechanism in order to communicate the capacity information to other network nodes which adds complexity and can be unreliable under adverse network conditions. On the other hand, remote passive methods do not require a dissemination mechanism and so can be simpler to implement and also do not suffer from communication reliability issues. Many applications (e.g. ANDSF etc) can benefit from utilizing this capacity information. Therefore, in this thesis we propose a new remote passive Capacity Utilization estimator performed by neighbour nodes. However, there will be an error associated with the measurements owing to the differences in the wireless medium as observed by the different nodes’ location. The main undertaking of this thesis is to address this issue. An error model is developed to analyse the main sources of error and to determine their impact on the accuracy of the estimator. Arising from this model, a number of modifications are implemented to improve the accuracy of the estimator. The network simulator ns2 is used to investigate the performance of the estimator and the results from a range of different test scenarios indicate its feasibility and accuracy as a passive remote method. Finally, the estimator is deployed in a node saturation detection scheme where it is shown to outperform two other similar schemes based upon queue observation and probing with ping packets

    Loss Diagnosis and Indoor Position Location System based on IEEE 802.11 WLANs

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    Wireless local area networks (WLANs) have been widely deployed to provide short range broadband communications. Due to the fast evolvement of IEEE 802.11 based WLAN standards and various relevant applications, many research efforts have been focused on the optimization of WLAN data rate, power and channel utilization efficiency. On the other hand, many emerging applications based on WLANs have been introduced. Indoor position location (IPL) system is one of such applications which turns IEEE 802.11 from a wireless communications infrastructure into a position location network. This thesis mainly focuses on data transmission rate enhancement techniques and the development of IEEE 802.11 WLAN based IPL system with improved locationing accuracy. In IEEE 802.11 systems, rate adaptation algorithms (RAAs) are employed to improve transmission efficiency by choosing an appropriate modulation and coding scheme accord­ ing to point-to-point channel conditions. However, due to the resource-sharing nature of WLANs, co-channel interferences and frame collisions cannot be avoided, which further complicates the wireless environment and makes the RAA design a more challenging task. As WLAN performance depends on many dynamic factors such as multipath fading and co-channel interferences, differentiating the cause of performance degradation such as frame losses, which is known as loss diagnosis techniques, is essential for performance enhance­ ments of existing rate adaptation schemes. In this thesis, we propose a fast and reliable collision detection scheme for frame loss diagnosis in IEEE 802.11 WLANs. Collisions are detected by tracking changes of the signal-to-interference-and-noise-ratio (SINR) in IEEE 802.11 WLANs with a nonparametric order-based cumulative sum (CUSUM) algorithm for rapid loss diagnosis. Numerical simulations are conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of the proposed collision detection scheme. The other aspect of this thesis is the investigation of an IEEE 802.11 WLAN based IPL system. WLAN based IPL systems have received increasing attentions due to their variety of potential applications. Instead of relying on dedicated locationing networks and devices, IEEE 802.11 WLAN based IPL systems utilize widely deployed IEEE 802.11 WLAN infrastructures and standardized wireless stations to determine the position of a target station in indoor environments. iii Abstract In this thesis, a WLAN protocol-based distance measurement technique is investigated, which takes advantages of existing IEEE 802.11 data/ACK frame exchange sequences. In the proposed distance measurement technique, neither dedicated hardware nor hardware modifications is required. Thus it can be easily integrated into off-the-shelf commercial, inexpensive WLAN stations for IPL system implementation. Field test results confirm the efficacy of the proposed protocol-based distance measurement technique. Furthermore, a preliminary IPL system based on the proposed method is also developed to evaluate the feasibility of the proposed technique in realistic indoor wireless environments

    Contention-based learning MAC protocol for broadcast Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication

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    Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication (V2V) is an upcoming technology that can enable safer, more efficient transportation via wireless connectivity among moving cars. The key enabling technology, specifying the physical and medium access control (MAC) layers of the V2V stack is IEEE 802.11p, which belongs in the IEEE 802.11 family of protocols originally designed for use in WLANs. V2V networks are formed on an ad hoc basis from vehicular stations that rely on the delivery of broadcast transmissions for their envisioned services and applications. Broadcast is inherently more sensitive to channel contention than unicast due to the MAC protocol’s inability to adapt to increased network traffic and colliding packets never being detected or recovered. This paper addresses this inherent scalability problem of the IEEE 802.11p MAC protocol. The density of the network can range from being very sparse to hundreds of stations contenting for access to the channel. A suitable MAC needs to offer the capacity for V2V exchanges even in such dense topologies which will be common in urban networks. We present a modified version of the IEEE 802.11p MAC based on Reinforcement Learning (RL), aiming to reduce the packet collision probability and bandwidth wastage. Implementation details regarding both the learning algorithm tuning and the networking side are provided. We also present simulation results regarding achieved message packet delivery and possible delay overhead of this solution. Our solution shows up to 70% increase in throughput compared to the standard IEEE 802.11p as the network traffic increases, while maintaining the transmission latency within the acceptable levels

    Improving Performance for CSMA/CA Based Wireless Networks

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    Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) based wireless networks are becoming increasingly ubiquitous. With the aim of supporting rich multimedia applications such as high-definition television (HDTV, 20Mbps) and DVD (9.8Mbps), one of the technology trends is towards increasingly higher bandwidth. Some recent IEEE 802.11n proposals seek to provide PHY rates of up to 600 Mbps. In addition to increasing bandwidth, there is also strong interest in extending the coverage of CSMA/CA based wireless networks. One solution is to relay traffic via multiple intermediate stations if the sender and the receiver are far apart. The so called “mesh” networks based on this relay-based approach, if properly designed, may feature both “high speed” and “large coverage” at the same time. This thesis focusses on MAC layer performance enhancements in CSMA/CA based networks in this context. Firstly, we observe that higher PHY rates do not necessarily translate into corresponding increases in MAC layer throughput due to the overhead of the CSMA/CA based MAC/PHY layers. To mitigate the overhead, we propose a novel MAC scheme whereby transported information is partially acknowledged and retransmitted. Theoretical analysis and extensive simulations show that the proposed MAC approach can achieve high efficiency (low MAC overhead) for a wide range of channel variations and realistic traffic types. Secondly, we investigate the close interaction between the MAC layer and the buffer above it to improve performance for real world traffic such as TCP. Surprisingly, the issue of buffer sizing in 802.11 wireless networks has received little attention in the literature yet it poses fundamentally new challenges compared to buffer sizing in wired networks. We propose a new adaptive buffer sizing approach for 802.11e WLANs that maintains a high level of link utilisation, while minimising queueing delay. Thirdly, we highlight that gross unfairness can exist between competing flows in multihop mesh networks even if we assume that orthogonal channels are used in neighbouring hops. That is, even without inter-channel interference and hidden terminals, multi-hop mesh networks which aim to offer a both “high speed” and “large coverage” are not achieved. We propose the use of 802.11e’s TXOP mechanism to restore/enfore fairness. The proposed approach is implementable using off-the-shelf devices and fully decentralised (requires no message passing)

    Cooperative communication in wireless networks: algorithms, protocols and systems

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    Current wireless network solutions are based on a link abstraction where a single co-channel transmitter transmits in any time duration. This model severely limits the performance that can be obtained from the network. Being inherently an extension of a wired network model, this model is also incapable of handling the unique challenges that arise in a wireless medium. The prevailing theme of this research is to explore wireless link abstractions that incorporate the broadcast and space-time varying nature of the wireless channel. Recently, a new paradigm for wireless networks which uses the idea of 'cooperative transmissions' (CT) has garnered significant attention. Unlike current approaches where a single transmitter transmits at a time in any channel, with CT, multiple transmitters transmit concurrently after appropriately encoding their transmissions. While the physical layer mechanisms for CT have been well studied, the higher layer applicability of CT has been relatively unexplored. In this work, we show that when wireless links use CT, several network performance metrics such as aggregate throughput, security and spatial reuse can be improved significantly compared to the current state of the art. In this context, our first contribution is Aegis, a framework for securing wireless networks against eavesdropping which uses CT with intelligent scheduling and coding in Wireless Local Area networks. The second contribution is Symbiotic Coding, an approach to encode information such that successful reception is possible even upon collisions. The third contribution is Proteus, a routing protocol that improves aggregate throughput in multi-hop networks by leveraging CT to adapt the rate and range of links in a flow. Finally, we also explore the practical aspects of realizing CT using real systems.PhDCommittee Chair: Sivakumar, Raghupathy; Committee Member: Ammar, Mostafa; Committee Member: Ingram, Mary Ann; Committee Member: Jayant, Nikil; Committee Member: Riley, Georg
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