Title :
Cooperative Carrier Signaling: Harmonizing Coexisting WPAN and WLAN Devices
Author :
Xinyu Zhang ; Shin, Kang G.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Abstract :
The unlicensed ISM spectrum is getting crowded by wireless local area network (WLAN) and wireless personal area network (WPAN) users and devices. Spectrum sharing within the same network of devices can be arbitrated by existing MAC protocols, but the coexistence between WPAN and WLAN (e.g., ZigBee and WiFi) remains a challenging problem. The traditional MAC protocols are ineffective in dealing with the disparate transmit-power levels, asynchronous time-slots, and incompatible PHY layers of such heterogeneous networks. Recent measurement studies have shown moderate-to-high WiFi traffic to severely impair the performance of coexisting ZigBee. We propose a novel mechanism, called cooperative carrier signaling (CCS), that exploits the inherent cooperation among ZigBee nodes to harmonize their coexistence with WiFi WLANs. CCS employs a separate ZigBee node to emit a carrier signal (busy tone) concurrently with the desired ZigBee´s data transmission, thereby enhancing the ZigBee´s visibility to WiFi. It employs an innovative way to concurrently schedule a busy tone and a data transmission without causing interference between them. We have implemented and evaluated CCS on the TinyOS/MICAz and GNURadio/USRP platforms. Our extensive experimental evaluation has shown that CCS reduces collision between ZigBee and WiFi by 50% for most cases, and by up to 90% in the presence of a high-level interference, all at negligible WiFi performance loss.
Keywords :
access protocols; cooperative communication; personal area networks; telecommunication signalling; telecommunication traffic; wireless LAN; CCS; GNURadio-USRP platforms; MAC protocols; PHY layers; TinyOS-MICAz platform; WLAN devices; WPAN device; WiFi performance loss; ZigBee data transmission; ZigBee nodes; asynchronous time-slots; cooperative carrier signaling; data transmission; heterogeneous networks; moderate-to-high WiFi traffic; spectrum sharing; transmit-power levels; unlicensed ISM spectrum; wireless local area network; wireless personal area network; IEEE 802.11 Standards; Interference; Multiaccess communication; Radio transmitters; Sensors; Wireless personal area networks; Zigbee; 802.11; 802.15.4; GNURadio/USRP; TinyOS/MICAz; WiFi; ZigBee; coexistence; heterogeneous networks; software radio;
Journal_Title :
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNET.2012.2200499