A Research on Data Dissemination and Topology Control for Wireless Sensor Networks

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dc.contributor.advisor고영배-
dc.contributor.authorMir, Zeeshan Hameed-
dc.date.accessioned2019-10-21T07:13:48Z-
dc.date.available2019-10-21T07:13:48Z-
dc.date.issued2009-02-
dc.identifier.other9511-
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/handle/2018.oak/17509-
dc.description학위논문(박사)--아주대학교 정보통신전문대학원 :정보통신공학과,2009. 2-
dc.description.abstractThe work in this dissertation spans several of the research challenges and issues in wireless sensor networks (WSNs). Sensors are battery driven thus energy conservation is critical for network lifetime longevity. However, network throughput and latency are equally important for many of the sensor network applications. The decision about how these nodes communicate has a significant impact on the energy, throughput and latency requirements of a specific application. Specially, particular network architectures with mobile nodes and low-power image sensors poses several new challenges for control protocols (such as channel access and routing) design and development. Moreover, the efficiency of a sensor network depends not only on its control protocols, but also on its topology. Topology control has been proved to be an efficient method for reducing energy consumption and enhancing the network capacity. In such protocols, sensor nodes collaborate to optimize the choice of their transmit power level in order to generate a final network topology with the desired properties. The first part of the dissertation is a bipartite that addresses two different research problems. (1) Data Dissemination in mobile sensor networks; and (2) An enhancement to IEEE 802.15.4 protocol to support multimedia services in sensor networks. Each of problems is presented in an independent chapter. In the first chapter of this part, we present a data dissemination scheme that exploits Quadtree-based successive partitioning of sensor network space to calculate a set of rendezvous points. A common hierarchy of rendezvous nodes is then constructed to provide more efficient routing among multiple mobile stimuli and sink nodes. Through extensive simulation based studies we have shown that by making data forwarding independent of the current mobile stimuli location we are able to conserve significant amount of energy. Moreover, the proposed scheme minimizes communication overhead/delay associated with tracking sink mobility, as well. The main contributions of the second chapter are design and implementation of TEA-15.4 (short for Traffic and Energy-Aware IEEE 802.15.4), an enhancement to the IEEE 802.15.4 MAC protocol. Our scheme design exploits the information on data traffic to adapt the active period in Beacon-Enabled mode of the protocol. In order to convey data traffic information to the Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN) coordinator we provide two traffic indication techniques. Both of these techniques are compatible with the original IEEE 802.15.4 standard i.e., the traffic indication process works without introducing any new control frame. Through extensive simulations and testbed experiments, we show that TEA.15.4 not only provides sufficient throughput to support multimedia communication, but also offers lower energy consumption for the sensing devices. The second part of this dissertation involves the design and evaluation of two neighbor-based topology control algorithms for sensor networks. Both algorithms concentrate on the improvements of energy efficiency of the whole network through optimization of number of neighbors of each node. Lower message complexity makes these schemes scalable and suitable for energy constrained sensor networks. In the first algorithm, we ensure fully-connected network topology with significantly lesser energy cost and neighborhood size than the previous studies. We also proposed a neighbor-based mechanism to support a mobile sink and show that sink mobility over the topology controlled network has negligible effect on the network performance. While previous research for topology control in wireless ad hoc networks emphasized on finding an optimal transmission range for each node with minimal energy cost and network-wide connectivity; little work is done on generating topologies that can be tuned to favor certain data traffic models in WSNs at the same time as giving good performance for a wide array for design goals. We presented an efficient, coloring algorithm that construct single network topology structure at various levels of details. The performance knob ? is employed that offers trade-off among several conflicting design goals such connectivity, minimum energy cost, path hop count and higher spatial reuse or lower interference by means of lower nodal degree.-
dc.description.tableofcontents1. Introduction 1 1.1 Wireless Sensor Networks ?An Overview 1 1.2 Contributions of this Dissertation 7 1.2.1 Data Dissemination in Wireless Sensor Networks 7 1.2.2 Topology Control in Wireless Sensor Networks 9 1.3 Dissertation Structure 10 2. A Quadtree-based Hierarchical Data Dissemination for Mobile Sensor Networks 11 2.1 Introduction 11 2.2 Related Work 13 2.3 Quadtree-based Data Dissemination (QDD) 15 2.3.1 Quadtree-based Network Space Partitioning 16 2.3.2 Data Forwarding in QDD 18 2.3.3 Query Forwarding in QDD 20 2.3.4 Handling scenarios caused by random sensor deployment and node failures 22 2.4 Performance Evaluation 24 2.4.1 Simulation Environments 24 2.4.2 Simulation Results 25 3. Design and Implementation of Enhanced IEEE 802.15.4 for Supporting Multimedia Service in Wireless Sensor Networks 35 3.1 Introduction 35 3.2 Background and Related Work 38 3.2.1 A brief overview of the IEEE 802.15.4 standards 38 3.2.2 Related Work 40 3.3 Motivation via the Real Tests in IEEE 802.15.4 based WMSNs 41 3.3.1 The software stacks for the IEEE 802.15.4 implementation 41 3.3.2 Camera sensor embedded ZigbeX Platform 42 3.3.3 Experimental environments and results in the IEEE 802.15.4 based WMSNs 44 3.4 TEA-15.4: The enhanced version of IEEE 802.15.4 for Multimedia Services 47 3.4.1 The Proposed Traffic Indication Mechanisms for the TEA-15.4 Protocol 48 3.4.2 Adaptive Active Duration 51 3.5 Performance Evaluation 53 3.5.1 An Experimental Study using Real Sensor Platforms 53 3.5.2 A Simulation Study using TOSSIM 56 4. Energy Efficient Topology Control and Routing for Mobile Wireless Sensor Networks 63 4.1 Introduction 63 4.2 Related Work and Motivation 65 4.2.1 Topology Control 65 4.2.2 Routing among data sources and mobile sinks 67 4.2.3 Motivation 68 4.3 The Proposed Scheme: k+ Neigh Topology Control Protocol 72 4.3.1 Neighbor Discovery Phase 72 4.3.2 Topology Setup Phase 73 4.3.3 Neighbor-based Mobile Sink Tracking Phase 77 4.4 Performance Evaluation 80 4.4.1 Simulation Study for k+ Neigh Topology Control 81 4.4.2 Simulation Study for Routing over k+ Neigh topology with Static and Mobile Sink 90 5. Collaborative Topology Control of Wireless Sensor Networks using Transmit Power Adjustment 96 5.1 Introduction 96 5.2 Related Work and Motivation 99 5.2.1 Related work on topology control 99 5.2.2 Motivation 103 5.3 Topology Management via Power Control 104 5.3.1 System model and assumptions 104 5.3.2 Neighbor Discovery Phase 106 5.3.3 Topology Construction Phase 107 5.3.4 Topology Repair Phase 117 5.4 Performance Evaluation 118 5.4.1 Simulation Environment 118 5.4.2 Simulation Results 124 6. Conclusion and Future Work 138 6.1 Quadtree-based Hierarchical Data Dissemination 138 6.2 Enhanced IEEE 802.15.4 for Multimedia Service 139 6.3 Efficient Topology Control and Routing 140 6.4 Collaborative Topology Control using Transmit Power Adjustment 141 7. Appendix A 142 8. Bibliography 144-
dc.language.isoeng-
dc.publisherThe Graduate School, Ajou University-
dc.rights아주대학교 논문은 저작권에 의해 보호받습니다.-
dc.titleA Research on Data Dissemination and Topology Control for Wireless Sensor Networks-
dc.title.alternativeMir Zeeshan Hameed-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.affiliation아주대학교 정보통신전문대학원-
dc.contributor.alternativeNameMir Zeeshan Hameed-
dc.contributor.department정보통신전문대학원 정보통신공학과-
dc.date.awarded2009. 2-
dc.description.degreeMaster-
dc.identifier.localId567613-
dc.identifier.urlhttp://dcoll.ajou.ac.kr:9080/dcollection/jsp/common/DcLoOrgPer.jsp?sItemId=000000009511-
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Special Graduate Schools > Graduate School of Information and Communication Technology > Department of Information and Communication > 3. Theses(Master)
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