Topics in Internet Research Energy Efficient Routing in Ad-Hoc Wireless Networks Aadil Zia Khan Department of Computer Science Lahore University of Management Sciences
Ad-Hoc Wireless Networks (Introduction) A wireless network where there is no fixed infrastructure All wireless enabled devices within the range of each other can discover and communicate with each other in a peer-to-peer fashion without involving central access points. Broadcast mode of communication Mobile
Ad-Hoc Wireless Networks (Uses) Disaster management Military Supply chain management Environment studies Conferences Classrooms And many more……..
Ad-Hoc Wireless Networks (Energy Issues) Usually run on batteries Difficult to replenish Energy consumption must be carefully controlled Much of the energy consumption is because of data reception (0.5 mJ/bit) and transmission (1 mJ/bit) Now compare this to only 0.8 mJ for 208 CPU cycles Efficient data transfers will alleviate much of the energy problem
Current Handling of the Energy Problem MAC Layer Reducing transmission range Multi-hop transmission of packet Especially useful in areas of high node density Network Layer Energy efficient routing Route cost based on energy consumption along that path Route cost as a rapidly increasing function of decreasing remaining energy at a node Pruning of redundant data packets Routing over multiple paths selected randomly Proactive vs. Reactive routing
My Research Objective Focus only on the network layer Survey of different energy efficient routing techniques and architectures Unicast and multicast traffic Pros & Cons and situation dependent suitability Find open issues and research challenges
Routing Techniques Network Structure Flat routing Hierarchical routing Location-based routing Protocol Operation Multi-path based routing Query based routing Negotiation based routing QoS based routing Coherent based routing
References [1] [2] Sagnik Bhattacharya, Hyung Kim, Shashi Prabh, Tarek F. Abdelzaher: Energy-Conserving Data Placement and Asynchronous Multicast in Wireless Sensor Networks. MobiSys 2003 [3] Marwan Krunz, Alaa Muqattash, Sung-Ju Lee: “Transmission power control in wireless ad hoc networks: challenges, solutions and open issues.” IEEE Network 18(5): 8-14 (2004) [4] J. Gao, L. J. Guibas, J. Hershberger, L. Zhang and A. Zhu. “Geometric spanners for routing in mobile networks.” Proc. 2nd ACM Symp. on Ad-Hoc Networking and Computing (MobiHoc), October 2001, pages [5] Rahul C. Shah and Jan M. Rabaey. “Energy aware routing for low energy ad hoc sensor networks.” In Proc. IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC), Orlando, FL, March [6] Ivan Stojmenovic, "Position-based routing in ad hoc networks," IEEE Communications Magazine, vol. 40, pp , July [7] Jamal N. Al-Karaki, Ahmed E. Kamal, " Routing Techniques in Wireless Sensor Networks: A Survey", IEEE Wireless Communications, December 2004 [8] Xiaoyan Hong, Kaixin Xu, and Mario Gerla, "Scalable Routing Protocols for Mobile Ad Hoc Networks, " IEEE Network, special issue on Scalability in Communication Networks, July-Aug, 2002, pp
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