70 research outputs found
Scaling of critical connectivity of mobile ad hoc communication networks
In this paper, critical global connectivity of mobile ad hoc communication
networks (MAHCN) is investigated. We model the two-dimensional plane on which
nodes move randomly with a triangular lattice. Demanding the best communication
of the network, we account the global connectivity as a function of
occupancy of sites in the lattice by mobile nodes. Critical phenomena
of the connectivity for different transmission ranges are revealed by
numerical simulations, and these results fit well to the analysis based on the
assumption of homogeneous mixing . Scaling behavior of the connectivity is
found as , where , is
the length unit of the triangular lattice and is the scaling index in
the universal function . The model serves as a sort of site percolation
on dynamic complex networks relative to geometric distance. Moreover, near each
critical corresponding to certain transmission range , there
exists a cut-off degree below which the clustering coefficient of such
self-organized networks keeps a constant while the averaged nearest neighbor
degree exhibits a unique linear variation with the degree k, which may be
useful to the designation of real MAHCN.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Energy Efficient Mobile Routing in Actuator and Sensor Networks with Connectivity Preservation
International audienceIn mobile wireless sensor networks, flows sent from data col- lecting sensors to a sink could traverse inefficient resource expensive paths. Such paths may have several negative effects such as devices bat- tery depletion that may cause the network to be disconnected and packets to experience arbitrary delays. This is particularly problematic in event- based sensor networks (deployed in disaster recovery missions) where flows are of great importance. In this paper, we use node mobility to im- prove energy consumption of computed paths. Mobility is a two-sword edge, however. Moving a node may render the network disconnected and useless. We propose CoMNet (Connectivity preservation Mobile routing protocol for actuator and sensor NETworks), a localized mechanism that modifies the network topology to support resource efficient transmissions. To the best of our knowledge, CoMNet is the first georouting algorithm which considers controlled mobility to improve routing energy consump- tion while ensuring network connectivity. CoMNet is based on (i) a cost to progress metric which optimizes both sending and moving costs, (ii) the use of a connected dominating set to maintain network connectivity. CoMNet is general enough to be applied to various networks (actuator, sensor). Our simulations show that CoMNet guarantees network connec- tivity and is effective in achieving high delivery rates and substantial energy savings compared to traditional approaches
- …