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Minimum Energy Mobile Wireless Networks

Minimum Energy Mobile Wireless Networks. IEEE JSAC 2001/10/18. Outline. Introduction Network layer requirements The power consumption model Minimum power networks Distributed network protocol Simulations Conclusion. Introduction.

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Minimum Energy Mobile Wireless Networks

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  1. Minimum Energy Mobile Wireless Networks IEEE JSAC 2001/10/18

  2. Outline • Introduction • Network layer requirements • The power consumption model • Minimum power networks • Distributed network protocol • Simulations • Conclusion

  3. Introduction • This paper present a position-based algorithm to set up and maintain a minimum energy network between users that are randomly deployed over an area and are allowed to move with random velocities. • Each node has a low-power globe positioning system (GPS) receiver on board. • The protocol is self-reconfiguring in mobile scenarios.

  4. Network Layer Requirements • A network graph is said to be “strongly connected” if there exists a path from any node to any other node in the graph. • This paper take one of the nodes to be the information sink for all nodes in the network. They call this node the “master-site.”

  5. The Power Consumption Model • This model has three components • Small-scale variations • Large-scale variations • Path loss

  6. The Power Consumption Model • Small-scale variations • These are modeled by a Rayleigh distribution. • A wireless communication receiver is designed with diversity reception to combat small-scale variations. (Rake receiver) • In a rake receiver, a technique called maximum ratio combining (MRC) is used to optimally combine these independent stream.

  7. The Power Consumption Model • Large-scale variations • The received signal power averaged over small-scale variations. • A outage probability is specified for large-scale variations. The transmitter must adjust its transmit power to satisfy the specification.

  8. The Power Consumption Model • Path loss • The received signal power averaged over large-scale variations has been found to have a distance dependence which is well modeled by 1/d n. • The path loss may normally depend on the heights of the transmit antenna

  9. The Power Consumption Model • Directly transmit form A to C will consume more power than relay the message through node B.

  10. Minimum Power Networks • Consider three node i(transmitter), r(relay), and j(destination). The position of j is (x,y). • Definition 1- relay region: the relay region Ri→j of the transmit-relay node pair (i,j) is defined to be

  11. Minimum Power Networks • Definition 2-deployment region: any bounded set in R2 that has the position of the nodes in Ñ as a subset is said to be a deployment region. • Definition 3-enclosure and neighbor: the enclosure of a transmit node i is define as the nonempty solution εi to the set of the equations

  12. Minimum Power Networks

  13. Minimum Power Networks • Definition 4-enclosed node: a node i is said to be enclosed if it has communication links to each of its neighbors. • Definition 5-enclosure graph: the enclosure graph of a set of nodes Ñ is the graph whose vertex set is Ñ and whose edge set is where li→k is the directed communications link from i to k.

  14. Minimum Power Networks • Theorem 1-strong connectivity: fix the deployment region DÑ for a set of node Ñ.The enclosure graph of Ñ is strongly connected.

  15. Distributed Network Protocol • The main idea of this protocol is that a node does not need to consider all the nodes in the network to find the globe minimum power path to the master-site. • This protocol can divide into two parts: • Phase1: search for enclosure • Phase2: cost distribution

  16. Distributed Network Protocol • Phase1 : Search for Enclosure • Each node in the algorithm starts a search by sending out a beacon search signal that include the position information. • Every node runs exactly the same algorithm. Then it will concentrate on a particular node and call it the transmit node. • The transmit node listens for nearby nodes and calculates the relay region for them.

  17. Distributed Network Protocol • The transmit node must keep only those nodes that do not lie in the relay region of previously found nodes. • Each time new nodes are found, the transmit node must update it relay graph.

  18. Distributed Network Protocol • If a node found (call it k) falls in the relay region of some other found (call it j), then we mark k “dead”. We say that j “blocks” k. • If a node is not blocked by any other node found in this search, then we mark the node “alive”. • The set of alive nodes constitutes the set of neighbors for transmit node i when the search terminates.

  19. Distributed Network Protocol • Phase2 : Cost Distribution • The algorithm finds the optimal links on the enclosure graph. • The cost of a node i is defined as the minimum power necessary for i to establish a path to the master-site.

  20. Distributed Network Protocol • Each node calculates the minimum cost it can attain given the cost of its neighbors. Let nN(i). When i receives the information Cost(n), it computes: then i compute

  21. Simulations

  22. Conclusion • This paper present a routing protocol which find the minimum power topology for a stationary ad hoc network environment. • Brief and to the point, this paper modeled the ad hoc network as the spanning tree then find the minimum spanning tree.

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