| Literature DB >> 30274181 |
Suelen Laurindo1,2, Ricardo Moraes3, Ríad Nassiffe4, Carlos Montez5, Francisco Vasques6.
Abstract
Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) are enabler technologies for the implementation of the Internet of Things (IoT) concept. WSNs provide an adequate infrastructure for the last-link communication with smart objects. Nevertheless, the wireless communication medium being inherently unreliable, there is the need to increase its communication reliability. Techniques based on the use of cooperative communication concepts are one of the ways to achieve this target. Within cooperative communication techniques, nodes selected as relays transmit not only their own data, but also cooperate by retransmitting data from other nodes. A fundamental step to improve the communication reliability of WSNs is related to the use of efficient relay selection techniques. This paper proposes a relay selection technique based on multiple criteria to select the smallest number of relay nodes and, at the same time, to ensure an adequate operation of the network. Additionally, two relay updating schemes are also investigated, defining periodic and adaptive updating policies. The simulation results show that both proposed schemes, named Periodic Relay Selection and Adaptive Relay Selection, significantly improve the communication reliability of the network, when compared to other state-of-the-art relay selection schemes.Entities:
Keywords: WSN; cooperative communication; cooperative diversity; relay selection; wireless sensor network
Year: 2018 PMID: 30274181 PMCID: PMC6210775 DOI: 10.3390/s18103263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Wireless sensor network that needs a relay.
Figure 2Relay selection categories based on the criteria used to select the cooperating nodes.
Relay selection techniques.
| State-of-the-Art | Category | Periodic or Adaptive | Exchange of Additional Messages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liu et al. [ | Link Quality | P | |
| Marchenko et al. [ | Link Quality | P/A | √ |
| Li et al. [ | Link Quality | P | √ |
| Ferdouse and Anpalagan [ | Link Quality | P | |
| Andre et al. [ | Link Quality | A | √ |
| Valle et al. [ | Link Quality | P | |
| Etezadi et al. [ | Link Quality and Neighborhood | P | √ |
| Alkhayyat, Gazi and Sadkhan [ | Link Quality and Neighborhood | P | √ |
| Brante et al. [ | Link Quality and Energy | P | |
| Ahmed, Razzaque and Hong [ | Link Quality and Energy | P | √ |
| Pham and Kim [ | Link Quality and Energy | P | √ |
| Cheikh, Simpson and Sun [ | Link Quality and Energy | P | √ |
| Gokturk and Gurbuz [ | Link Quality and Data Rate | P | |
| Ouyang et al. [ | Link Quality and Data Rate | P | √ |
| Willing and Uhlemann [ | Random Relay Selection | P | |
| Proposed Technique | Multi Parameters | P/A |
Figure 3Beacon frame format.
Figure 4Data frame format.
Figure 5Transmission steps.
Figure 6Retransmission steps.
Figure 7Network with the neighborhood of each node.
Figure 8Operation of the periodic relay selection scheme.
Figure 9Operation of the adaptive relay selection scheme.
Simulation setting.
| Parameters | Values | Parameters | Values |
|---|---|---|---|
| Node distribution | Random with coordinator in center | Beacon Order (BO) | 6 |
| Radio | CC2420 | Superframe Order (SO) | 4 |
| MAC layer | IEEE 802.15.4 |
| 0.5 |
| Number of superframe slots | 145 (5 are used by the CAP) |
| 1.5 |
| Data rate | 250 kbps |
| 1.0 |
| Initial energy per nodo | 18,720 J |
| 1.5 |
| TxOutputPower | 0 dBm |
| 4 (for PRS) |
Figure 10Success Rate—static topology (a) vs. dynamic topology (b).
Figure 11Energy consumption—static topology (a) vs. dynamic topology (b).
Figure 12Average Number of Relay Selection—static topology (a) vs. dynamic topology (b).
Figure 13Average number of cooperation exchanges for a dynamic scenario.
Figure 14Percentage of useless retransmission messages for a dynamic scenario.
Figure 15Correlation between energy consumption and useless retransmission messages.