DocumentCode
790901
Title
High transmission power increases the capacity of ad hoc wireless networks
Author
Behzad, Arash ; Rubin, Izhak
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., California Univ., Los Angeles, CA, USA
Volume
5
Issue
1
fYear
2006
Firstpage
156
Lastpage
165
Abstract
In this paper, the effect of transmission power on the throughput capacity of finite ad hoc wireless networks, considering a scheduling-based medium access control (MAC) protocol such as time division multiple access (TDMA) and an interference model that is based on the received signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) levels, is analyzed and investigated. The authors prove that independent of nodal distribution and traffic pattern, the capacity of an ad hoc wireless network is maximized by properly increasing the nodal transmission power. Under the special case of their analysis that the maximum transmission power can be arbitrarily large, the authors prove that the fully connected topology (i.e., the topology under which every node can directly communicate with every other node in the network) is always an optimum topology, independent of nodal distribution and traffic pattern. The present result stands in sharp contrast with previous results that appeared in the literature for networks with random nodal distribution and traffic pattern, which suggest that the use of minimal common transmission power that maintains connectivity in the network maximizes the throughput capacity. A linear programming (LP) formulation for obtaining the exact solution to the optimization problem, which yields the throughput capacity of finite ad hoc wireless networks given a nodal transmit power vector, is also derived. The authors´ LP-based performance evaluation results confirm the distinct capacity improvement that can be attained under their recommended approach, as well as identify the magnitude of capacity upgrade that can be realized for networks with random and uniform topologies and traffic patterns.
Keywords
ad hoc networks; linear programming; mobile radio; radiofrequency interference; telecommunication network topology; telecommunication traffic; time division multiple access; MAC protocol; TDMA; ad hoc wireless network capacity; interference model; linear programming formulation; nodal transmit power vector; random nodal distribution; scheduling-based medium access control; signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio; throughput capacity; time division multiple access; traffic pattern; transmission power effect; uniform topologies; Access protocols; Interference; Media Access Protocol; Network topology; Signal to noise ratio; Telecommunication traffic; Throughput; Time division multiple access; Wireless application protocol; Wireless networks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1276
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TWC.2006.1576539
Filename
1576539
Link To Document