DocumentCode
962658
Title
An Integrated Approach to Energy-Aware Medium Access for Wireless Sensor Networks
Author
Chen, Yunxia ; Zhao, Qing
Author_Institution
Univ. of California, Davis
Volume
55
Issue
7
fYear
2007
fDate
7/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
3429
Lastpage
3444
Abstract
This paper addresses the design of distributed medium access control (MAC) protocols for wireless sensor networks under the performance measure of network lifetime. Integrated in the design of MAC schemes are two key physical-layer parameters: the channel state and the residual energy of each sensor. The individual and collective impacts of incorporating these parameters in MAC design on network lifetime are studied. We show that a lifetime-maximizing protocol should dynamically trade off the channel state information (CSI) with the residual energy information (REI) according to the age of the network. Specifically, lifetime-maximizing protocols should be more opportunistic by prioritizing sensors with better channels for transmission when the network is young and more conservative by favoring sensors with more residual energies when the network is old. Following this general design principle, we propose a dynamic protocol for lifetime maximization (DPLM) that exploits local information of both channel state and residual energy. Analytical and simulation results are provided to demonstrate the dynamic property and the asymptotic optimality of DPLM: its relative performance loss as compared to the performance limit defined by the optimal centralized protocol using global CSI and REI diminishes as the initial energy of each sensor increases.
Keywords
access protocols; telecommunication network management; wireless channels; wireless sensor networks; channel state information; cross layer design; distributed medium access control protocols; dynamic protocol; energy-aware medium access; lifetime maximization; lifetime-maximizing protocol; network lifetime; opportunistic transmission; residual energy information; wireless sensor networks; Access protocols; Channel state information; Energy efficiency; Media Access Protocol; Performance analysis; Performance loss; Physical layer; Signal processing; Wireless application protocol; Wireless sensor networks; Cross-layer design; distributed protocol; energy efficiency; medium access control (MAC); network lifetime; opportunistic transmission; wireless sensor network;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Signal Processing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1053-587X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TSP.2007.893933
Filename
4244758
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