Title :
An application-specific protocol architecture for wireless microsensor networks
Author :
Heinzelman, Wendi B. ; Chandrakasan, Anantha P. ; Balakrishnan, Hari
Author_Institution :
MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
fDate :
10/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Networking together hundreds or thousands of cheap microsensor nodes allows users to accurately monitor a remote environment by intelligently combining the data from the individual nodes. These networks require robust wireless communication protocols that are energy efficient and provide low latency. We develop and analyze low-energy adaptive clustering hierarchy (LEACH), a protocol architecture for microsensor networks that combines the ideas of energy-efficient cluster-based routing and media access together with application-specific data aggregation to achieve good performance in terms of system lifetime, latency, and application-perceived quality. LEACH includes a new, distributed cluster formation technique that enables self-organization of large numbers of nodes, algorithms for adapting clusters and rotating cluster head positions to evenly distribute the energy load among all the nodes, and techniques to enable distributed signal processing to save communication resources. Our results show that LEACH can improve system lifetime by an order of magnitude compared with general-purpose multihop approaches.
Keywords :
access protocols; adaptive systems; distributed processing; electric sensing devices; radio networks; telecommunication network routing; LEACH; application-perceived quality; application-specific data aggregation; application-specific protocol architecture; cluster head positions rotation; distributed cluster formation; distributed signal processing; energy-efficient cluster-based routing; energy-efficient media access; general-purpose multihopping; latency; low-energy adaptive clustering hierarchy; media access control protocols; microsensor networks; microsensor nodes; network performance; protocol architecture; remote environment monitoring; routing protocols; self-organization; system lifetime; wireless channel; wireless communication protocols; wireless microsensor networks; Access protocols; Delay; Energy efficiency; Intelligent networks; Microsensors; Remote monitoring; Robustness; Signal processing algorithms; Wireless application protocol; Wireless communication;
Journal_Title :
Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TWC.2002.804190