737 research outputs found
Self-organizing TDMA MAC protocol for effective capacity improvement in IEEE 802.11 WLANs
This paper presents a MAC protocol named selforganizing time division multiple-access (SO-TDMA) aiming to enable quality-of-service (QoS) provisioning for delay-sensitive applications. Channel access operation in SO-TDMA is similar to carrier-sense multiple-access (CSMA) in the beginning, but quickly converges to TDMA with an adaptive pseudo-frame structure. This approach has the benefits of TDMA in a highload traffic environment, while overcoming its disadvantages in low-load, heterogeneous traffic scenarios. Furthermore, it supports distributed and asynchronous channel-access operation as in CSMA. These are achieved by dynamically adapting the transmission opportunity duration based on the common idle/busy channel state information acquired by each node through learning, without explicit message passing. Performance comparison of CSMA, TDMA, and SO-TDMA in terms of effective capacity, system throughput, and collision probability is investigated
A Survey on Scheduling in IEEE 802.16 Mesh Mode
Cataloged from PDF version of article.IEEE 802.16 standard (also known as WiMAX)
defines the wireless broadband network technology which aims
to solve the so called last mile problem via providing high
bandwidth Internet even to the rural areas for which the cable
deployment is very costly. The standard mainly focuses on the
MAC and PHY layer issues, supporting two transmission modes:
PMP (Point-to-Multipoint) and mesh modes. Mesh mode is an
optional mode developed as an extension to PMP mode and it
has the advantage of having an improving performance as more
subscribers are added to the system using multi-hop routes. In
802.16 MAC protocol, mesh mode slot allocation and reservation
mechanisms are left open which makes this topic a hot research
area. Hence, the focus of this survey will mostly be on the mesh
mode, and the proposed scheduling algorithms and performance
evaluation methods
On the performance of STDMA Link Scheduling and Switched Beamforming Antennas in Wireless Mesh Networks
Projecte final de carrera realitzat en col.laboració amb King's College LondonWireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) aim to revolutionize Internet connectivity due to
its high throughput, cost-e ectiveness and ease deployment by providing last mile
connectivity and/or backhaul support to di erent cellular networks. In order not to
jeopardize their successful deployment, several key issues must be investigated and
overcome to fully realize its potential. For WMNs that utilize Spatial Reuse TDMA
as the medium access control, link scheduling still requires further enhancements.
The rst main contribution of this thesis is a fast randomized parallel link swap
based packing (RSP) algorithm for timeslot allocation in a spatial time division multiple
access (STDMA) wireless mesh network. The proposed randomized algorithm
extends several greedy scheduling algorithms that utilize the physical interference
model by applying a local search that leads to a substantial improvement in the
spatial timeslot reuse. Numerical simulations reveal that compared to previously
scheduling schemes the proposed randomized algorithm can achieve a performance
gain of up to 11%. A signi cant bene t of the proposed scheme is that the computations
can be parallelized and therefore can e ciently utilize commoditized and
emerging multi-core and/or multi-CPU processors.
Furthermore, the use of selectable multi-beam directional antennas in WMNs,
such as beam switched phase array antennas, can assist to signi cantly enhance
the overall reuse of timeslots by reducing interference levels across the network and
thereby increasing the spectral e ciency of the system. To perform though a switch
on the antenna beam it may require up to 0.25 ms in practical deployed networks,
while at the same time very frequent beam switchings can a ect frame acquisition
and overall reliability of the deployed mesh network.
The second key contribution of this thesis is a set of algorithms that minimize the
overall number of required beam switchings in the mesh network without penalizing
the spatial reuse of timeslots, i.e., keeping the same overall frame length in the
network. Numerical investigations reveal that the proposed set of algorithms can
reduce the number of beam switchings by almost 90% without a ecting the frame
length of the network
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Performance enhancements for single hop and multi-hop meshed high data rate wireless personal area networks
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.The High Data Rate (HDR) Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) typically have a limited operating range and are intended to support demanding multi-media applications at high data rates. In order to extend the communication range, HDR WPANs can operate in a wireless mesh configuration (i.e. enable multiple WPAN clusters) to communicate in a multi-hop fashion. HDR WPANs face several research challenges and some of the open key issues are limited capacity, optimum resource allocation to requesting devices and maintaining Quality of Service (QoS) for real time multimedia flows. Although, there have been some scheduling algorithms proposed for HDR WPANs, the main objective is to maintain the QoS in most cases whereas efficient and fair utilization of network capacity is still largely open for research. This thesis mainly intends to resolve the issues related to capacity of HDR WPANs such as admission control, fair allocation of Channel Time Allocations (CTAs), improvement in capacity through transmission power control, and efficient utilization of time by each flow. A technique which re-orders the time slots to reduce queuing delay for meshed WPANs is also proposed and evaluated.
The first contribution aims to improve peer-to-peer connectivity in case of two or more independent piconet devices by proposing an inter-PAN communication framework that is augmented by an admission control strategy to handle the cases when the superframe capacity is congested. The queued devices are prioritized by proposing a parameter called the Rejection Ratio. The second contribution consists of a resource allocation framework for meshed WPANs. The main objectives are to reduce the control traffic due to high volume of channel time reservation requests and introduce an element of fairness in the channel time allocated to requesting devices. The objectives are achieved by using traffic prediction techniques and an estimated backoff procedure to reduce control traffic, and define different policies based on offered traffic for fair allocation of channel time. The centralized scheme uses traffic prediction techniques to use the proposed concept of bulk reservations. Based on the bulk reservations and resource allocation policies, the overall overhead is reduced while an element of fairness is shown to be maintained for certain scenarios. In the third contribution, the concepts of Time Efficiency and CTA switching are introduced to improve communication efficiency and utilization of superframe capacity in meshed WPANs. Two metrics known as Switched Time Slot (STS) and Switched Time Slot with Re-ordering (STS-R) are proposed which aim to achieve the purpose. The final contribution proposes and evaluates a technique called CTA overlappnig to improve capacity in single hop and meshed WPANs using tramission power control. Extensive simulation studies are performed to analyze and to evaluate the proposed techniques. Simulation results demonstrate significant improvements in meshed WPANs performance in terms of capacity utilization, improvement in fairness index for CTA allocation by upto 62% in some cases, reduction in control traffic overhead by upto 70% and reduction in delay for real time flows by more than 10% in some cases
Time-Driven Access and Forwarding for Industrial Wireless Multihop Networks
The deployment of wireless technologies in industrial networks is very promising mainly due to their inherent flexibility. However, current wireless solutions lack the capability to provide the deterministic, low delay service required by many industrial applications. Moreover, the high level of interference generated by industrial equipment limits the coverage that ensures acceptable performance. Multi-hop solutions, when combining frame forwarding with higher node density, have the potential to provide the needed coverage while keeping radio communication range short. However, in multi-hop solutions the medium access time at each of the nodes traversed additively contributes to the end-to-end delay and the forwarding delay (i.e., the time required for packets to be processed, switched, and queued) at each node is to be added as well. This paper describes Time-driven Access and Forwarding (TAF), a solution for guaranteeing deterministic delay, at both the access and forwarding level, in wireless multi-hop networks, analyzes its properties, and assesses its performance in industrial scenario
BATSEN: Modifying the BATMAN Routing Protocol for Wireless Sensor Networks
The proliferation of autonomous Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) has spawned research seeking power efficient communications to improve the lifetime of sensor motes. WSNs are characterized by their power limitations, wireless transceivers, and the converge-cast communications techniques. WSN motes use low-power, lossy radio systems deployed in dense, random topologies, working sympathetically to sense and notify a sink node of the detectable information. In an effort to extend the life of battery powered motes, and hence the life of the network, various routing protocols have been suggested in an effort to optimize converge-cast delivery of sensor data. It is well known that reducing the overhead required to perform converge-cast routing and communications reduces the effects of the primary power drain in the mote, the transceiver. Furthermore, WSNs are not well protected; network security costs energy both in computation and in RF transmission. This paper investigates the use of a Mobile Ad-hoc Networking (MANET) routing protocol known as B.A.T.M.A.N. in WSN. This thesis proposes that the features of B.A.T.M.A.N. in the MANET realm may prove beneficial to the WSN routing domain; and that slight modifications to the routing technique may prove beneficial beyond current protocol technologies. The B.A.T.M.A.N. variant will be compared against the contemporary LEACH WSN routing protocol to discern any potential energy savings
Self-organizing TDMA: a distributed contention-resolution MAC protocol
This paper presents a self-organizing time division multiple access (SO-TDMA) protocol for contention resolution aiming to support delay-sensitive applications. The proposed SOTDMA follows a cognition cycle where each node independently observes the operation environment, learns about the network traffic load, and then makes decisions to adapt the protocol for smart coexistence. Channel access operation in SO-TDMA is similar to carrier-sense multiple-access (CSMA) in the beginning, but then quickly converges to TDMA with an adaptive pseudo-frame structure. This approach has the benefits of TDMA in a highload traffic condition, and overcomes its disadvantages in lowload, heterogeneous traffic scenarios. Furthermore, it supports distributed and asynchronous channel-access operation. These are achieved by adapting the transmission-opportunity duration to the common idle/busy channel state information acquired by each node, without any explicit message passing among nodes. The process of adjusting the transmission duration is modeled as a congestion control problem to develop an additive-increasemultiplicative-decrease (AIMD) algorithm, which monotonically converges to fairness. Furthermore, the initial access phase of SO-TDMA is modeled as a Markov chain with one absorbing state and its required convergence time is studied accordingly. Performance of SO-TDMA in terms of effective capacity, system throughput, collision probability, delay-outage probability and fairness is investigated. Simulation results illustrate its effectiveness in performance improvement, approaching the ideal case that needs complete and precise information about the queue length and the channel conditions of all nodes
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