DocumentCode :
2022051
Title :
Towards energy-fairness in asynchronous duty-cycling sensor networks
Author :
Zhenjiang Li ; Mo Li ; Yunhao Liu
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Comput. Eng., Nanyang Technol. Univ., Nanyang, China
fYear :
2012
fDate :
25-30 March 2012
Firstpage :
801
Lastpage :
809
Abstract :
In this paper, we investigate the problem of controlling node sleep intervals so as to achieve the min-max energy fairness in asynchronous duty-cycling sensor networks. We propose a mathematical model to describe the energy efficiency of such networks and observe that traditional sleep interval setting strategy, i.e., operating sensor nodes with identical sleep intervals, or intuitive control heuristics, i.e., greedily increasing sleep intervals of sensor nodes with high energy consumption rates, hardly perform well in practice. There is an urgent need to develop an efficient sleep interval control strategy for achieving fair and high energy efficiency. To this end, we theoretically formulate the Sleep Interval Control (SIC) problem and find it a convex optimization problem. By utilizing the convex property, we decompose the original problem and propose a distributed algorithm, called GDSIC. In GDSIC, sensor nodes can tune sleep intervals through a local information exchange such that the maximum energy consumption rate in the network approaches to be minimized. The algorithm is self-adjustable to the traffic load variance and is able to serve as a unified framework for a variety of asynchronous duty-cycling MAC protocols. We implement our approach in a prototype system and test its feasibility and applicability on a 50-node testbed. We further conduct extensive trace-driven simulations to examine the efficiency and scalability of our algorithm with various settings.
Keywords :
access protocols; convex programming; distributed algorithms; minimax techniques; GDSIC; asynchronous duty-cycling MAC protocols; asynchronous duty-cycling sensor networks; convex optimization problem; distributed algorithm; identical sleep interval; intuitive control heuristics; mathematical model; maximum energy consumption rate; min-max energy fairness; network energy efficiency; node sleep interval controlling; operating sensor nodes; sleep interval control problem; sleep interval setting strategy; trace-driven simulation; traffic load variance; Data communication; Energy consumption; Protocols; Receivers; Silicon carbide; Switching circuits; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM, 2012 Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
ISSN :
0743-166X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0773-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOM.2012.6195827
Filename :
6195827
Link To Document :
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