16 research outputs found
Reliable Delay Constrained Multihop Broadcasting in VANETs
Vehicular communication is regarded as a major innovative feature for in-car technology. While improving road safety is unanimously considered the major driving factor for the deployment of Intelligent Vehicle Safety Systems, the challenges relating to reliable multi-hop broadcasting are exigent in vehicular networking. In fact, safety applications must rely on very accurate and up-to-date information about the surrounding environment, which in turn requires the use of accurate positioning systems and smart communication protocols for exchanging information. Communications protocols for VANETs must guarantee fast and reliable delivery of information to all vehicles in the neighbourhood, where the wireless communication medium is shared and highly unreliable with limited bandwidth. In this paper, we focus on mechanisms that improve the reliability of broadcasting protocols, where the emphasis is on satisfying the delay requirements for safety applications. We present the Pseudoacknowledgments (PACKs) scheme and compare this with existing methods over varying vehicle densities in an urban scenario using the network simulator OPNET
A Platform for Large-Scale Regional IoT Networks
The Internet of Things (IoT) promises to allow everyday objects to connect to the Internet and interact with users and other machines ubiquitously. Central to this vision is a pervasive wireless communication network connecting each end device. For individual IoT applications it is costly to deploy a dedicated network or connect to an existing cellular network, especially as these applications do not fully utilize the bandwidth provided by modern high speeds networks (e.g., WiFi, 4G LTE). On the other hand, decades of wireless research have produced numerous low-cost chip radios and effective networking stacks designed for short-range communication in the Industrial, Scientific and Medical Radio band (ISM band). In this thesis, we consider adapting this existing technology to construct shared regional low-powered networks using commercially available ISM band transceivers. To maximize network coverage, we focus on low-power wide-area wireless communication which enables links to reliably cover 10 km or more depending on terrain transmitting up to 1 Watt Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (EIRP). With potentially thousands of energy constrained IoT devices vying for extremely limited bandwidth, minimizing network coordination overhead and maximizing channel utility is essential. To address these challenges, we propose a distributed queueing (DQ) based MAC protocol, DQ-N. DQ-N exhibits excellent performance, supporting thousands of IoT devices from a single base station. In the future, these networks could accommodate a heterogeneous set of IoT applications, simplifying the IoT application development cycle, reducing total system cost, improving application reliability, and greatly enhancing the user experience
Time diversity solutions to cope with lost packets
A dissertation submitted to Departamento de Engenharia Electrotécnica of Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia of Universidade Nova de Lisboa in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Engenharia Electrotécnica e de ComputadoresModern broadband wireless systems require high throughputs and can also have very high
Quality-of-Service (QoS) requirements, namely small error rates and short delays. A high spectral efficiency is needed to meet these requirements. Lost packets, either due to errors or collisions, are usually discarded and need to be retransmitted, leading to performance degradation.
An alternative to simple retransmission that can improve both power and spectral
efficiency is to combine the signals associated to different transmission attempts.
This thesis analyses two time diversity approaches to cope with lost packets that are
relatively similar at physical layer but handle different packet loss causes. The first is a lowcomplexity Diversity-Combining (DC) Automatic Repeat reQuest (ARQ) scheme employed in a Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) architecture, adapted for channels dedicated to a single user. The second is a Network-assisted Diversity Multiple Access (NDMA) scheme, which is a multi-packet detection approach able to separate multiple mobile terminals transmitting simultaneously in one slot using temporal diversity. This thesis combines these techniques with Single Carrier with Frequency Division Equalizer (SC-FDE) systems, which are widely recognized as the best candidates for the uplink of future broadband wireless systems.
It proposes a new NDMA scheme capable of handling more Mobile Terminals (MTs)
than the user separation capacity of the receiver. This thesis also proposes a set of analytical tools that can be used to analyse and optimize the use of these two systems. These tools are then employed to compare both approaches in terms of error rate, throughput and delay performances, and taking the implementation complexity into consideration.
Finally, it is shown that both approaches represent viable solutions for future broadband wireless communications complementing each other.Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia - PhD grant(SFRH/BD/41515/2007); CTS multi-annual funding project PEst-OE/EEI/UI0066/2011, IT
pluri-annual funding project PEst-OE/EEI/LA0008/2011, U-BOAT project PTDC/EEATEL/
67066/2006, MPSat project PTDC/EEA-TEL/099074/2008 and OPPORTUNISTICCR
project PTDC/EEA-TEL/115981/200
On the Use of Carrier Sense Mechanisms in Low-Power Wide Area Networks
International audienceAdding carrier sense capabilities to nodes in lowpower wide area networks is considered as a good strategy to cope with scalability problems. However, in settings with large cells, the clear channel assessment function will give imperfect results, producing scenarios rich in hidden nodes. In this paper, we assess the impact of these hidden nodes, showing that the average gains with respect to an Aloha strategy are significantly decreasing as the number of hidden nodes increases. Moreover, in terms of energy, our results indicate that carrier sensing consumes 10 to 100 times more than a simple Aloha channel access. We also look at the individual node behavior, demonstrating an important heterogeneity among nodes, with performance generally correlated to the quality of the carrier sense mechanism
IoT and Smart Cities: Modelling and Experimentation
Internet of Things (IoT) is a recent paradigm that envisions a near future, in which
the objects of everyday life will communicate with one another and with the users,
becoming an integral part of the Internet. The application of the IoT paradigm to
an urban context is of particular interest, as it responds to the need to adopt ICT
solutions in the city management, thus realizing the Smart City concept.
Creating IoT and Smart City platforms poses many issues and challenges. Building
suitable solutions that guarantee an interoperability of platform nodes and easy
access, requires appropriate tools and approaches that allow to timely understand
the effectiveness of solutions. This thesis investigates the above mentioned issues
through two methodological approaches: mathematical modelling and experimenta-
tion. On one hand, a mathematical model for multi-hop networks based on semi-
Markov chains is presented, allowing to properly capture the behaviour of each node
in the network while accounting for the dependencies among all links. On the other
hand, a methodology for spatial downscaling of testbeds is proposed, implemented,
and then exploited for experimental performance evaluation of proprietary but also
standardised protocol solutions, considering smart lighting and smart building scenarios.
The proposed downscaling procedure allows to create an indoor well-accessible
testbed, such that experimentation conditions and performance on this testbed closely
match the typical operating conditions and performance where the final solutions are
expected to be deployed
Protocols for voice/data integration in a CDMA packet radio network.
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1999.Wireless cellular communications is witnessing a rapid growth in, and demand for,
improved technology and range of information types and services. Future third
generation cellular networks are expected to provide mobile users with ubiquitous
wireless access to a global backbone architecture that carries a wide variety of electronic
services. This thesis examines the topic of multiple access protocols and models
suitable for modem third-generation wireless networks.
The major part of this thesis is based on a proposed Medium Access Control (MAC)
protocol for a Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) data packet radio network, as
CDMA technology is proving to be a promising and attractive approach for spectrally
efficient, economical and high quality digital communications wireless networks. The
proposed MAC policy considers a novel dual CDMA threshold model based on the
Multiple Access Interference (MAl) capacity of the system. This protocol is then
extended to accommodate a mixed voice/data traffic network in which variable length
data messages share a common CDMA channel with voice users, and where the voice
activity factor of human speech is exploited to improve the data network performance.
For the protocol evaluation, the expected voice call blocking probability, expected data
throughput and expected data message delay are considered, for both a perfect channel
and a correlated Rayleigh fading channel. In particular, it is shown that a significant
performance enhancement can be made over existing admission policies through the
implementation of a novel, dynamic, load-dependent blocking threshold in conjunction
with a fixed CDMA multiple access threshold that is based on the maximum acceptable
level of MAl
Practical Evaluation of Low-complexity Medium Access Control Protocols for Wireless Sensor Networks
This thesis studies the potential of a novel approach to ensure more efficient and
intelligent assignment of capacity through medium access control (MAC) in
practical wireless sensor networks (WSNs), whereby Reinforcement Learning
(RL) is employed as an intelligent transmission strategy. RL is applied to framed
slotted-ALOHA to provide perfect scheduling. The system converges to a steady
state of a unique transmission slot assigned per node in single-hop and multi-hop
communication if there is sufficient number of slots available in the network,
thereby achieving the optimum performance.
The stability of the system against possible changes in the environment and
changing channel conditions is studied. A Markov model is provided to represent
the learning behaviour, which is also used to predict how the system loses its
operation after convergence. Novel schemes are proposed to protect the lifetime
of the system when the environment and channel conditions are insufficient to
maintain the operation of the system.
Taking real sensor platform architectures into consideration, the practicality of
MAC protocols for WSNs must be considered based on hardware
limitations/constraints. Therefore, the performance of the schemes developed is
demonstrated through extensive simulations and evaluations in various test-beds.
Practical evaluations show that RL-based schemes provide a high level of
flexibility for hardware implementation
Estudo de desempenho de protocolos distribuídos de acesso ao meio em redes de rádio cognitivo
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) - NEUF PTDC/EEA- TEL/120666/2010, ADIN PTDC/EEI-TEL/2990/2012 e MANY2COMWIN EXPL/EEI-TEL/0969/201