Title :
On channel adaptive energy management in wireless sensor networks
Author :
Lin, Xiao-Hui ; Kwok, Yu-Kwong
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Hong Kong Univ., China
Abstract :
Energy constraints in a wireless sensor network are crucial issues critically affecting the network lifetime and connectivity. To realize true energy saving in a wireless environment, the time varying property of the wireless channel should also be taken into account. Unfortunately, this factor has long been ignored in most existing state-of-the-art energy saving protocols. Neglecting the effects of varying channel quality can lead to an unnecessary waste of precious battery resources, and, in turn, can result in the rapid depletion of sensor energy and partitioning of the network. In this paper, we propose a channel adaptive energy management protocol, called CAEM, that can exploit this time varying nature of the wireless link. Specifically, CAEM leverages on the synergistically cross-layer interaction between physical and MAC layers. Thus, each sensor node can intelligently access the wireless medium according to the current wireless link quality and the predicted traffic load, to realize an efficient utilization of the energy. Extensive simulation results indicate that CAEM can achieve as much as 40% reduction in energy dissipation compared with traditional protocols without channel adaptation.
Keywords :
access protocols; battery management systems; telecommunication links; telecommunication network management; telecommunication power supplies; time-varying channels; wireless sensor networks; CAEM; MAC layers; battery resource; channel adaptation; channel adaptive energy management protocol; channel quality; cross-layer interaction; energy constraints; energy dissipation; energy saving protocol; energy utilization; network connectivity; network lifetime; network partitioning; sensor energy depletion; sensor node; wireless environment; wireless link; wireless sensor networks; Batteries; Computer networks; Energy dissipation; Energy management; Intelligent networks; Intelligent sensors; Military computing; Protocols; Sensor systems and applications; Wireless sensor networks; adaptive cross-layer protocols; channel state dependent; mobile computing; power saving; wireless sensor networks;
Conference_Titel :
Parallel Processing, 2005. ICPP 2005 Workshops. International Conference Workshops on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2381-1
DOI :
10.1109/ICPPW.2005.61