A Performance Study of Deployment Factors in Wireless Mesh Networks (2007)
| Venue: | in IEEE Infocom, 2007 |
| Citations: | 8 - 1 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Robinson07aperformance,
author = {Joshua Robinson and Eugene Ng and Joshua Robinson},
title = {A Performance Study of Deployment Factors in Wireless Mesh Networks},
booktitle = {in IEEE Infocom, 2007},
year = {2007},
pages = {2054--2062}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
This thesis presents a measurement-parameterized performance study of deploy-ment factors in wireless mesh networks using four performance metrics: client cov-erage area, backhaul tier connectivity, protocol-dependent throughput, and per-user fair rates. For each metric, I identify and study deployment factors which strongly influence mesh performance via an extensive set of Monte Carlo simulations capturing realistic physical layer behavior. My findings include: (i) A random topology is un-suitable for a large-scale mesh deployment due to doubled node density requirements, yet a moderate level of perturbations from ideal grid placement has minor impact. (ii) Multiple backhaul radios per mesh node is a cost-effective deployment strategy as it leads to mesh deployments costing 50 % less than with a single-radio architecture. This work adds to the understanding of mesh deployment factors and their general impact on performance, providing further insight into practical mesh deployments. Acknowledgments First and foremost, I would like to thank my advisor, Dr. Edward Knightly, for the guidance, support, and opportunities he has provided me. He has been a







