| Literature DB >> 30360447 |
Lien-Wu Chen1, Yu-Hao Peng2, Yu-Chee Tseng3, Ming-Fong Tsai4.
Abstract
Mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) have gained a lot of interests in research communities for the infrastructure-less self-organizing nature. A MANET with fleet cyclists using smartphones forms a two-tier mobile long-thin network (MLTN) along a common cycling route, where the high-tier network is composed of 3G/LTE interfaces and the low-tier network is composed of IEEE 802.11 interfaces. The low-tier network may consist of several path-like networks. This work investigates cooperative sensing data collection and distribution with packet collision avoidance in a two-tier MLTN. As numbers of cyclists upload their sensing data and download global fleet information frequently, serious bandwidth and latency problems may result if all members rely on their high-tier interfaces. We designed and analyzed a cooperative framework consisting of a distributed grouping mechanism, a group merging and splitting method, and a sensing data aggregation scheme. Through cooperation between the two tiers, the proposed framework outperforms existing works by significantly reducing the 3G/LTE data transmission and the number of 3G/LTE connections.Entities:
Keywords: ad-hoc network; cycling group; fleet management; mobile long-thin network; sensor network
Year: 2018 PMID: 30360447 PMCID: PMC6210167 DOI: 10.3390/s18103588
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Comparison of existing clustering mechanisms [22,23,24,25,26,27,28] and our framework.
| Features | Grouping Principle | Optimization Goal | Group Size | Network Interface | Simulation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| reference [ | inter-vehicle distance | low-tier delivery latency | multi-hop | DSRC (802.11p) | NS-2 |
| reference [ | link stability | high-tier signaling overhead | multi-hop | 3G + DSRC (802.11p) | NS-2 |
| reference [ | safety distance | low-tier clustering overhead | multi-hop | DSRC (802.11p) | Qualnet/C++ |
| reference [ | cluster lifetime | high-tier bandwidth usage | one-hop | LTE + DSRC (802.11p) | NS-3 |
| reference [ | speed difference | low-tier stable structure | one-hop | DSRC (802.11p) | C++ |
| reference [ | zone of relevance | low-tier message lifetime | multi-hop | DSRC (802.11p) | NS-2 |
| our framework | fleet member | high-tier bandwidth usage | multi-hop | 3G/LTE + Wi-Fi (802.11a/b/g) | Qualnet |
Figure 1A two-tier mobile long-thin network formed by fleet cyclists.
Figure 2(a) A new fleet cyclist joins an existing group L; (b) groups L and L are merged; (c) group cyclist j changes its direction and thus group L is split; and (d) group cyclist j speeds up and/or group cyclist slows down, thus group L is split.
Figure 3Comparisons of simulation and analytical results.
Simulation parameters.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Simulation time | 900 s |
| Number of cyclists | 30∼150 |
| Cycling speed | 20∼40 km/h |
| Network interface | IEEE 802.11b |
| Path loss model | Two Ray (n = 2) |
| Frequency band | 2.4 GHz |
| Channel bandwidth | 20 MHz |
| Carrier sensing threshold | −88 dBm |
| Transmission range | 283 m |
| Rate adaptation mechanism | Auto Rate Fallback (ARF) |
| Data aggregation ratio | 0.25 |
| Data update interval | 5∼25 s |
| Number of simulation runs | 100 |
Figure 4Comparisons of: (a) the sensing data amount transmitted via 3G/LTE; and (b) the numbers of 3G/LTE connections under the sensing data update interval of five seconds.
Figure 5Comparisons of: (a) the sensing data amount transmitted via 3G/LTE; and (b) the numbers of 3G/LTE connections under different sensing data update intervals.