Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Wichita State Univ., Wichita, KS, USA
Abstract :
Broadcasting is an important operation in wireless networks where control information is usually propagated as broadcasts for the realization of most networking protocols. In traditional ad hoc networks, broadcasts are conducted on a common channel, which is shared by all nodes in the network. However, in cognitive radio (CR) ad hoc networks, unlicensed users may observe heterogeneous spectrum availability, which is unknown to other unlicensed users before the control information was broadcast. Thus, it is extremely challenging that broadcasts can be successfully conducted without knowing the spectrum availability information in advance. In addition, since broadcast collisions (i.e., simultaneous reception of broadcast messages at the same node) often lead to the waste of network resources, they should be efficiently mitigated in multihop scenarios. In this paper, a quality-of-service (QoS)-based broadcast protocol under Blind Information for multihop CR ad hoc networks, i.e., QB2IC, is proposed with the aim of having a high success rate and short broadcast delay. In our design, we do not assume that unlicensed users are aware of the network topology, the spectrum availability information, and time synchronization information. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first paper that investigates the broadcast issue in multihop CR ad hoc networks under blind information. Simulation results show that our proposed QB2IC protocol outperforms other broadcast schemes in terms of a higher success rate and shorter average broadcast delay.
Keywords :
ad hoc networks; broadcast communication; broadcasting; cognitive radio; quality of service; radio spectrum management; routing protocols; synchronisation; telecommunication network topology; QB2IC; QoS-based broadcast protocol; blind information; broadcast collisions; broadcasting; common channel; control information propagation; heterogeneous spectrum availability information; multihop cognitive radio ad hoc networks; network topology; networking protocols; quality-of-service-based broadcast protocol; simultaneous broadcast message reception; time synchronization information; wireless networks; Ad hoc networks; Delays; Network topology; Protocols; Quality of service; Receivers; Spread spectrum communication; Blind information; broadcast protocol; cognitive radio (CR); multihop communications; quality-of-service (QoS);