| Literature DB >> 35890947 |
Ghulam Ali1, Tariq Ali1, Insha Ul Hassan1, Ahmad Shaf1, Muhammad Irfan2, Grzegorz Nowakowski3, Kazimierz Kielkowicz3, Adam Glowacz4, Samar M Alqhtani5.
Abstract
High end-to-end delay is a significant challenge in the data collection process in the underwater environment. Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs) are a considerably reliable source of data collection if they have significant trajectory movement. Therefore, in this paper, a new routing algorithm known as Elliptical Shaped Efficient Data Gathering (ESEDG) is introduced for the AUV movement. ESEDG is divided into two phases: first, an elliptical trajectory has been designed for the horizontal movement of the AUV. In the second phase, the AUV gathers data from Gateway Nodes (GNs) which are associated with Member Nodes (MNs). For their association, an end-to-end delay model is also presented in ESEDG. The hierarchy of data collection is as follows: MNs send data to GNs, the AUV receives data from GNs, and forwards it to the sink node. Furthermore, the ESEDG was evaluated on the network simulator NS-3 version 3.35, and the results were compared to existing data collection routing protocols DSG-DGA, AEEDCO, AEEDCO-A, ALP, SEDG, and AEDG. In terms of network throughput, end-to-end delay, lifetime, path loss, and energy consumption, the results showed that ESEDG outperformed the baseline routing protocols.Entities:
Keywords: ESEDG; delay efficient; elliptical trajectory; energy consumption; gateway nodes; mobile nodes
Year: 2022 PMID: 35890947 PMCID: PMC9322603 DOI: 10.3390/s22145269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.847
Figure 1Sensor nodes identity represent in digits for AUV trajectory with HC.
Figure 2Multiple ellipse.
Figure 3Selecion of next forwaded node.
Figure 4(a) SPT implemented without the algorithm; (b) STP implemented with the algorithm; and (c) optimal path selected.
Simulation settings and their values.
| Simulation Parameters | Values |
|---|---|
| Number of nodes | 350 |
| Network range |
|
| Number of AUV | 1 |
| Number of sink nodes | 1 |
| Energy | Energy Model |
| Initial energy | 100 J |
| Acoustic network speed | 1500 m/s |
| Communication medium | Wireless |
| Wireless channel | Radio and Acoustic |
| Frequency | 15 KHz |
| Transmission range | 200 m |
| Receiving | 0.6 W |
| Data packet size | 50 B |
| Beacon message size | 54 B |
| Data rates | 12 kbps |
| Mobility | static and random |
| Transmission Power | 0.5 W |
| Idle Power | 0.008 W |
| Sleeping Power | 0.01 |
| Physical Layer | UnderwaterPhy |
| Mac Layer | UnderwaterMac |
| Antenna | OmniAntenna |
Figure 5Analysis of E2E delay with baseline schemes.
Figure 6Analysis of path loss with baseline schemes.
Figure 7Analysis of transmission loss with baseline schemes.
Figure 8Analysis of network throughput loss with baseline schemes.
Figure 9Analysis of network lifetime loss with baseline schemes.
Figure 10Analysis of network dead nodes with baseline schemes.
Figure 11Analysis of network energy consumption with baseline schemes.