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112
A survey of energy efficient network protocols for wireless networks
- Wireless Networks
, 2001
"... Abstract. Wireless networking has witnessed an explosion of interest from consumers in recent years for its applications in mobile and personal communications. As wireless networks become an integral component of the modern communication infrastructure, energy efficiency will be an important design ..."
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Cited by 157 (0 self)
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Abstract. Wireless networking has witnessed an explosion of interest from consumers in recent years for its applications in mobile and personal communications. As wireless networks become an integral component of the modern communication infrastructure, energy efficiency will be an important design consideration due to the limited battery life of mobile terminals. Power conservation techniques are commonly used in the hardware design of such systems. Since the network interface is a significant consumer of power, considerable research has been devoted to low-power design of the entire network protocol stack of wireless networks in an effort to enhance energy efficiency. This paper presents a comprehensive summary of recent work addressing energy efficient and low-power design within all layers of the wireless network protocol stack.
Power-Saving Protocols for IEEE 802.11-Based Multi-Hop Ad Hoc Networks
, 2002
"... Power-saving is a critical issue for almost all kinds of portable devices. In this paper, we consider the design of power-saving protocols for mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) that allow mobile hosts to switch to a low-power sleep mode. The MANETs being considered in this paper are characterized by u ..."
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Cited by 84 (1 self)
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Power-saving is a critical issue for almost all kinds of portable devices. In this paper, we consider the design of power-saving protocols for mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) that allow mobile hosts to switch to a low-power sleep mode. The MANETs being considered in this paper are characterized by unpredictable mobility, multi-hop communication, and no clock synchronization mechanism. In particular, the last characteristic would complicate the problem since a host has to predict when another host will wake up to receive packets. We propose three power management protocols, namely dominating-awake-interval, periodically-fully-awake-interval, and quorum-based protocols, which are directly applicable to IEEE 802.11based MANETs. As far as we know, the power management problem for multi-hop MANETs has not been seriously addressed in the literature. Existing standards, such as IEEE 802.11, HIPERLAN, and bluetooth, all assume that the network is fully connected or there is a clock synchronization mechanism. Extensive simulation results are presented to verify the effectiveness of the proposed protocols.
Capacity, Delay and Mobility in Wireless Ad-Hoc Networks
, 2003
"... Network throughput and packet delay are two important parameters in the design and the evaluation of routing protocols for ad-hoc networks. While mobility has been shown to increase the capacity of a network, it is not clear whether the delay can be kept low without trading off the throughput. We co ..."
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Cited by 81 (0 self)
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Network throughput and packet delay are two important parameters in the design and the evaluation of routing protocols for ad-hoc networks. While mobility has been shown to increase the capacity of a network, it is not clear whether the delay can be kept low without trading off the throughput. We consider a theoretical framework and propose a routing algorithm which exploits the patterns in the mobility of nodes to provide guarantees on the delay. Moreover, the throughput achieved by the algorithm is only a poly-logarithmic factor off from the optimal. The algorithm itself is fairly simple. In order to analyze its feasibility and the performance guarantee, we used various techniques of probabilistic analysis of algorithms. The approach taken in this paper could be applied to the analyses of some other routing algorithms for mobile ad hoc networks proposed in the literature.
On Calculating Power-Aware Connected Dominating Sets for Efficient Routing in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks
- IEEE/KICS Journal of Communications and Networks
, 2002
"... Abstract: Efficient routing among a set of mobile hosts (also called nodes) is one of the most important functions in ad hoc wireless networks. Routing based on a connected dominating set is a promising approach, where the searching space for a route is reduced to nodes in the set. A set is dominati ..."
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Cited by 81 (9 self)
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Abstract: Efficient routing among a set of mobile hosts (also called nodes) is one of the most important functions in ad hoc wireless networks. Routing based on a connected dominating set is a promising approach, where the searching space for a route is reduced to nodes in the set. A set is dominating if all the nodes in the system are either in the set or neighbors of nodes in the set. Wu and Li [1] proposed a simple and efficient distributed algorithm for calculating connected dominating set in ad hoc wireless networks, where connections of nodes are determined by geographical distances of nodes. In general, nodes in the connected dominating set consume more energy in order to handle various bypass traffics than nodes outside the set. To prolong the life span of each node, and hence, the network by balancing the energy consumption in the network, nodes should be alternated in being chosen to form a connected dominating set. In this paper, we propose a method of calculating power-aware connected dominating set. Our simulation results show that the proposed approach outperforms several existing approaches in terms of life span of the network. Index Terms: Ad hoc wireless networks, dominating sets, energy levels, mobile computing, routing, simulation. I.
Internal Node and Shortcut Based Routing With Guaranteed Delivery in Wireless Networks
- Cluster Computing
, 2001
"... Several distributed routing algorithms for wireless networks were described recently, based on location information of nodes available via Global Positioning System (GPS). In greedy routing algorithm sender or node S currently holding the message m forwards m to one of its neighbors that is the clos ..."
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Cited by 63 (12 self)
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Several distributed routing algorithms for wireless networks were described recently, based on location information of nodes available via Global Positioning System (GPS). In greedy routing algorithm sender or node S currently holding the message m forwards m to one of its neighbors that is the closest to destination. The algorithm fails if S does not have any neighbor that is closer to destination than S. FACE algorithm guarantees the delivery of m if the network, modeled by unit graph, is connected. GFG algorithm combines greedy and FACE algorithms. Greedy algorithm is applied as long as possible, until delivery or a failure. In case of failure, the algorithm switches to FACE algorithm until a node closer to destination than last failure node is found, at which point greedy algorithm is applied again. In this paper we further improve the performance of GFG algorithm, by reducing its average hop count. First we improve the FACE algorithm by adding a sooner-back procedure for earlier escape from FACE mode. Then we perform a shortcut procedure at each forwarding node S. Node S uses the local information available to calculate as many hops as possible and forwards the packet to the last known hop directly instead of forwarding it to the next hop. The second improvement is based on the concept of dominating sets. The network of internal nodes defines a connected dominating set, and each node must be either internal or directly connected to an internal node. We apply several existing definitions of internal nodes, namely the concepts of intermediate, inter-gateway and gateway nodes. We propose to run GFG routing, enhanced by shortcut procedure, on the dominating set, except possibly the first and last hops. We obtained localized routing algorithm that guarantees delivery an...
RNG and internal node based broadcasting algorithms in wireless one-to-one networks
, 2001
"... In a multihop wireless network, each node has a transmission radius and is able to send a message to one of its neighbors (one-to-one) or all of its neighbors (one-to-all) that are located within the radius. In a broadcasting task, a source node needs to send the same message to all the nodes in the ..."
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Cited by 60 (16 self)
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In a multihop wireless network, each node has a transmission radius and is able to send a message to one of its neighbors (one-to-one) or all of its neighbors (one-to-all) that are located within the radius. In a broadcasting task, a source node needs to send the same message to all the nodes in the network. In this paper, we propose to reduce the communication overhead of broadcasting algorithm for one-to-one model by applying the concepts of planar graphs such as RNG (relative neighborhood graphs) and connected dominating sets determined by internal nodes. Regular message exchanges between neighbors, which include location updates or signal strengths, suffice to maintain these structures, and they therefore do not impose additional communication overhead. In internal node based broadcasting, messages are forwarded on the edges that connect two internal nodes, and on edges that connect each non-internal node with its closest internal node. A neighbor elimination scheme is added to the...
Position Based Routing Algorithms For Ad Hoc Networks: A Taxonomy
- Ad Hoc Wireless Networking
, 2001
"... Recent availability of small inexpensive low power GPS receivers and techniques for finding relative coordinates based on signal strengths, and the need for the design of power efficient and scalable networks, provided justification for applying position based routing methods in ad hoc networks. A n ..."
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Cited by 54 (3 self)
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Recent availability of small inexpensive low power GPS receivers and techniques for finding relative coordinates based on signal strengths, and the need for the design of power efficient and scalable networks, provided justification for applying position based routing methods in ad hoc networks. A number of such algorithms were developed in last few years, in addition to few basic methods proposed about fifteen years ago. This article surveys known routing methods, and provides their taxonomy in terms of a number of characteristics: loop-free behavior, distributed operation (localized, global or zonal), path strategy (single path, multi-path or flooding based), metrics used (hop count, power or cost), memorization (memoryless or memorizing past traffic), guaranteed delivery, scalability, and robustness (strategies to handle the position deviation due to the dynamicity of the network). We also briefly discuss relevant issues such as physical requirements, experimental design, location updates, QoS, congestion, scheduling node activity, topology construction, broadcasting and network capacity.
Maximum Lifetime Routing in Wireless Ad-hoc Networks
- in INFOCOM
, 2004
"... Routing problems in mobile ad-hoc networks (MANET) have been receiving increasing attention in the last few years. Most of the proposed routing protocols concentrate on finding and maintaining routes in the face of changing topology caused by mobility or other environmental changes. More recently, p ..."
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Cited by 51 (0 self)
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Routing problems in mobile ad-hoc networks (MANET) have been receiving increasing attention in the last few years. Most of the proposed routing protocols concentrate on finding and maintaining routes in the face of changing topology caused by mobility or other environmental changes. More recently, power-aware routing protocols and topology control algorithms have been developed to address the issue of limited energy reserve of the nodes in ad-hoc networks. In this paper we consider the routing problem in MANET with the goal of maximizing the life time of the network. We propose a distributed routing algorithm that reaches the optimal (centralized) solution to within an asymptotically small relative error. Our approach is based on the formulation of multicommodity flow, and it allows to consider different power consumption models and bandwidth constraints. It works for both static and slowly changing dynamic networks.
DCTC: Dynamic Convoy Tree-Based Collaboration for Target Tracking in Sensor Networks
- IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
, 2004
"... Most existing work on sensor networks concentrates on finding efficient ways to forward data from the information source to the data centers, and not much work has been done on collecting local data and generating the data report. This paper studies this issue by proposing techniques to detect and t ..."
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Cited by 50 (6 self)
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Most existing work on sensor networks concentrates on finding efficient ways to forward data from the information source to the data centers, and not much work has been done on collecting local data and generating the data report. This paper studies this issue by proposing techniques to detect and track a mobile target. We introduce the concept of dynamic convoy tree-based collaboration, and formalize it as a multiple objective optimization problem which needs to find a convoy tree sequence with high tree coverage and low energy consumption. We propose an optimal solution which achieves 100% coverage and minimizes the energy consumption under certain ideal situations. Considering the real constraints of a sensor network, we propose several practical implementations: the conservative scheme and the prediction-based scheme for tree expansion and pruning; the sequential and the localized reconfiguration schemes for tree reconfiguration. Extensive experiments are conducted to compare the practical implementations and the optimal solution. The results show that the prediction-based scheme outperforms the conservative scheme and it can achieve similar coverage and energy consumption to the optimal solution. The experiments also show that the localized reconfiguration scheme outperforms the sequential reconfiguration scheme when the node density is high, and the trend is reversed when the node density is low.
Position-Based Routing in Ad Hoc Networks
, 2002
"... The recent availability of small, inexpensive low-power GPS receivers and techniques for finding relative coordinates based on signal strengths, and the need for the design of powerefficient and scalable networks provided justification for applying position-based routing methods in ad hoc networks. ..."
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Cited by 48 (1 self)
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The recent availability of small, inexpensive low-power GPS receivers and techniques for finding relative coordinates based on signal strengths, and the need for the design of powerefficient and scalable networks provided justification for applying position-based routing methods in ad hoc networks. A number of such algorithms were developed recently. This tutorial will concentrate on schemes that are loop-free, localized, and follow a single-path strategy, which are desirable characteristics for scalable routing protocols. Routing protocols have two modes: greedy mode (when the forwarding node is able to advance the message toward the destination) and recovery mode (applied until return to greedy mode is possible). We shall discuss them separately. Methods also differ in metrics used (hop count, power, cost, congestion, etc.), and in past traffic memorization at nodes (memoryless or memorizing past traffic). Salient properties to be emphasized in this review are guaranteed delivery, scalability, and robustness.

