530 research outputs found

    Reducing false wake-up in contention-based wake-up control of wireless LANs

    Get PDF
    This paper studies the potential problem and performance when tightly integrating a low power wake-up radio (WuR) and a power-hungry wireless LAN (WLAN) module for energy efficient channel access. In this model, a WuR monitors the channel, performs carrier sense, and activates its co-located WLAN module when the channel becomes ready for transmission. Different from previous methods, the node that will be activated is not decided in advance, but decided by distributed contention. Because of the wake-up latency of WLAN modules, multiple nodes may be falsely activated, except the node that will actually transmit. This is called a false wake-up problem and it is solved from three aspects in this work: (i) resetting backoff counter of each node in a way as if it is frozen in a wake-up period, (ii) reducing false wake-up time by immediately putting a WLAN module into sleep once a false wake-up is inferred, and (iii) reducing false wake-up probability by adjusting contention window. Analysis shows that false wake-ups, instead of collisions, become the dominant energy overhead. Extensive simulations confirm that the proposed method (WuR-ESOC) effectively reduces energy overhead, by up to 60% compared with state-of-the-arts, achieving a better tradeoff between throughput and energy consumption

    Utilizing ZigBee Technology for More Resource-efficient Wireless Networking

    Get PDF
    Wireless networks have been an essential part of communication in our daily life. Targeted at different applications, a variety of wireless networks have emerged. Due to constrained resources for wireless communications, challenges arise but are not fully addressed. Featured by low cost and low power, ZigBee technology has been developed for years. As the ZigBee technology becomes more and more mature, low-cost embedded ZigBee interfaces have been available off the shelf and their sizes are becoming smaller and smaller. It will not be surprising to see the ZigBee interface commonly embedded in mobile devices in the near future. Motivated by this trend, we propose to leverage the ZigBee technology to improve existing wireless networks. In this dissertation, we classify wireless networks into three categories (i.e., infrastructure-based, infrastructure-less and hybrid networks), and investigate each with a representative network. Practical schemes are designed with the major objective of improving resource efficiency for wireless networking through utilizing ZigBee technology. Extensive simulation and experiment results have demonstrated that network performance can be improved significantly in terms of energy efficiency, throughput, packet delivery delay, etc., by adopting our proposed schemes

    Energy-efficient vertical handover parameters, classification and solutions over wireless heterogeneous networks: a comprehensive survey

    Get PDF
    In the last few decades, the popularity of wireless networks has been growing dramatically for both home and business networking. Nowadays, smart mobile devices equipped with various wireless networking interfaces are used to access the Internet, communicate, socialize and handle short or long-term businesses. As these devices rely on their limited batteries, energy-efficiency has become one of the major issues in both academia and industry. Due to terminal mobility, the variety of radio access technologies and the necessity of connecting to the Internet anytime and anywhere, energy-efficient handover process within the wireless heterogeneous networks has sparked remarkable attention in recent years. In this context, this paper first addresses the impact of specific information (local, network-assisted, QoS-related, user preferences, etc.) received remotely or locally on the energy efficiency as well as the impact of vertical handover phases, and methods. It presents energy-centric state-of-the-art vertical handover approaches and their impact on energy efficiency. The paper also discusses the recommendations on possible energy gains at different stages of the vertical handover process

    Planning and realization of a WiFi 6 network to replace wired connections in an enterprise environment

    Get PDF
    WiFi (Wireless Fidelity) is a popular wireless LAN technology. It provides broadband wireless connectivity to all the users in the unlicensed 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz frequency bands. Given the fact that the WiFi technology is much easier and cost-efficient to deploy, it is rapidly gaining acceptance as an alternative to a wired local area network. Nowadays the Wireless access to data is a necessity for everyone in the daily life. Considering the last 30 years, the unlimited access to information has transformed entire industries, fueling growth, productivity and profits.The WiFi technology, which is governed by the IEEE 802.11 standards body, has played a key role in this transformation. In fact, thanks to WiFi, users can benefit of low cost access to high data rate wireless connectivity. The first version of the IEEE 802.11 protocol was released in 1997. IEEE 802.11 has been improved with different versions in order to enhance the throughput and support new technologies. WiFi networks are now experiencing the bandwidth-demanding media content as well as multiple WiFi devices for each user. As a consequence of this, WiFi 6, which is based on the IEEE 802.11ax standard, is focused on improving the efficiency of the radio link. However, there is a relatively modest increase in peak data rate too. In this thesis we have planned and realized a WiFi 6 network to replace wired connections in an enterprise environment. To do this the optimal access point placement problem has been taken into account, resulting in an improvement of the coverage. Subsequently, after the configuration from the controller, the performance of the new network has been tested in order to study if WiFi 6 can be used instead of wired connections.WiFi (Wireless Fidelity) is a popular wireless LAN technology. It provides broadband wireless connectivity to all the users in the unlicensed 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz frequency bands. Given the fact that the WiFi technology is much easier and cost-efficient to deploy, it is rapidly gaining acceptance as an alternative to a wired local area network. Nowadays the Wireless access to data is a necessity for everyone in the daily life. Considering the last 30 years, the unlimited access to information has transformed entire industries, fueling growth, productivity and profits.The WiFi technology, which is governed by the IEEE 802.11 standards body, has played a key role in this transformation. In fact, thanks to WiFi, users can benefit of low cost access to high data rate wireless connectivity. The first version of the IEEE 802.11 protocol was released in 1997. IEEE 802.11 has been improved with different versions in order to enhance the throughput and support new technologies. WiFi networks are now experiencing the bandwidth-demanding media content as well as multiple WiFi devices for each user. As a consequence of this, WiFi 6, which is based on the IEEE 802.11ax standard, is focused on improving the efficiency of the radio link. However, there is a relatively modest increase in peak data rate too. In this thesis we have planned and realized a WiFi 6 network to replace wired connections in an enterprise environment. To do this the optimal access point placement problem has been taken into account, resulting in an improvement of the coverage. Subsequently, after the configuration from the controller, the performance of the new network has been tested in order to study if WiFi 6 can be used instead of wired connections

    Energy-efficient vertical handover parameters, classification and solutions over wireless heterogeneous networks: a comprehensive survey

    Get PDF
    In the last few decades, the popularity of wireless networks has been growing dramatically for both home and business networking. Nowadays, smart mobile devices equipped with various wireless networking interfaces are used to access the Internet, communicate, socialize and handle short or long-term businesses. As these devices rely on their limited batteries, energy-efficiency has become one of the major issues in both academia and industry. Due to terminal mobility, the variety of radio access technologies and the necessity of connecting to the Internet anytime and anywhere, energy-efficient handover process within the wireless heterogeneous networks has sparked remarkable attention in recent years. In this context, this paper first addresses the impact of specific information (local, network-assisted, QoS-related, user preferences, etc.) received remotely or locally on the energy efficiency as well as the impact of vertical handover phases, and methods. It presents energy-centric state-of-the-art vertical handover approaches and their impact on energy efficiency. The paper also discusses the recommendations on possible energy gains at different stages of the vertical handover process

    MAC/PHY Co-Design of CSMA Wireless Networks Using Software Radios.

    Full text link
    In the past decade, CSMA-based protocols have spawned numerous network standards (e.g., the WiFi family), and played a key role in improving the ubiquity of wireless networks. However, the rapid evolution of CSMA brings unprecedented challenges, especially the coexistence of different network architectures and communications devices. Meanwhile, many intrinsic limitations of CSMA have been the main obstacle to the performance of its derivatives, such as ZigBee, WiFi, and mesh networks. Most of these problems are observed to root in the abstract interface of the CSMA MAC and PHY layers --- the MAC simply abstracts the advancement of PHY technologies as a change of data rate. Hence, the benefits of new PHY technologies are either not fully exploited, or they even may harm the performance of existing network protocols due to poor interoperability. In this dissertation, we show that a joint design of the MAC/PHY layers can achieve a substantially higher level of capacity, interoperability and energy efficiency than the weakly coupled MAC/PHY design in the current CSMA wireless networks. In the proposed MAC/PHY co-design, the PHY layer exposes more states and capabilities to the MAC, and the MAC performs intelligent adaptation to and control over the PHY layer. We leverage the reconfigurability of software radios to design smart signal processing algorithms that meet the challenge of making PHY capabilities usable by the MAC layer. With the approach of MAC/PHY co-design, we have revisited the primitive operations of CSMA (collision avoidance, carrier signaling, carrier sensing, spectrum access and transmitter cooperation), and overcome its limitations in relay and broadcast applications, coexistence of heterogeneous networks, energy efficiency, coexistence of different spectrum widths, and scalability for MIMO networks. We have validated the feasibility and performance of our design using extensive analysis, simulation and testbed implementation.PHDComputer Science & EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/95944/1/xyzhang_1.pd
    • …
    corecore