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Effects of Directional Antennas on 802.11e Muhammad Mahmudul Islam Ronald Pose Carlo Kopp School of Computer Science & Software Engineering Monash University Melbourne, Australia
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Agenda An analytical model & Simulation results to show the effect of directional antennas on network performance using 802.11e
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Assumptions in this Work Only the interference related effect on network performance is considered Scheme O: single channel and omni-directional antenna Scheme MO-x: x NICs, x distinct channels and omnidirectional antennas Scheme MD-x: x NICs and x directional antennas All antenna configurations had the same TX range Simulated with GloMoSim (ver 2.02) The effect of secondary lobes on the primary lobe has been ignored while using directional antennas EDCA of IEEE 802.11e has been used as MAC protocol DSR has been used as the routing protocol Adjacent nodes have been separated by 240 metres Traffic was generated with CBR UDP packets Ad-hoc networks similar to a SAHN are considered
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SAHN Multi-hop ad-hoc network Ideal for cooperative nodes, e.g. connecting houses and business Topology is quasi-static Uses wireless technology Multi-hop QoS routing Decentralized Multi Mbps broadband service No charges for SAHN traffic Can run alongside TCP/IP Conceived by Ronald Pose & Carlo Kopp in 1997
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Omni-directional Antennas Advantages Directional orientation is not required May provide more connecting links Installation is easy and quick Ideal for ad-hoc networks with high mobility Drawbacks Power radiates in all directions Increases hidden and exposed terminal problems Increases multiple access intereferences (MAI) Increases collisions and packet loss Degrades network performance Easy to eavesdrop
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Directional Antennas Drawbacks Requires antenna direction alignment May provide fewer links Installation may be complicated Network planning is more difficult Advantages Power can be beam formed Reduces hidden and exposed terminal problems Reduces multiple access intereferences (MAI) Reduces collisions and packet loss Improves network performance Eavesdropping is limited to the direction of communication Ideal for ad-hoc networks with less mobility
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Analytical Model (1/7) Basic of data transmission with directional antenna Basic of data transmission with omnidirectional antenna
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Analytical Model (2/7) Data transmission with single channel & omnidirectional antenna TX interval 3 T
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Analytical Model (3/7) Data transmission with multi-channel & omnidirectional antenna (1/2) TX interval 3 T
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Analytical Model (4/7) Data transmission with multi-channel & omnidirectional antenna (2/2) TX interval 2 T
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Analytical Model (5/7) Data transmission with directional antenna TX interval 1 T
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Analytical Model (6/7) Summary
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Simulation Setup 7 nodes are placed along a straight line Each node has at most 2 neighbors Schemes O, MO-2 and MD-2 are used Channel allocation for MO-2 is similar to Analytical Model (4/7) Single session for each pair Number of hops varied between 1-6 Each session is offered a load of 400 kbps Each UDP payload is 400 bytes long
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Simulation Result 1 T 2 T 3 T
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Analytical Model (7/7) Lets consider Two sessions with AC_VO and AC_BK Packet Tx interval of each session = 3xT More than one AC may result in virtual colission For multi-hop ad-hoc networks using 802.11e if there is a chance of real colission, there can be a circular dependecy between virtual colission and real colission Our model shows, Scheme MD-x has least chances of real colission So with multiple AC, MD-2 is expected to perform better than MO-2 & O
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Simulation Result (1/3) Processing delay of each node + delays for virtual & real collisions Processing delay of each node + delay for virtual collision
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Simulation Result (2/3) virtual + real collisions Only virtual collision
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Simulation Result (3/3) virtual + real collisions Only virtual collision
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Simulation Setup 77 nodes are placed on a 3000 3000 sq m flat terrain Each node has at most 6 neighbors Schemes O, MO-3 and MD-3 are used Channel allocation for MO-3 was random In MO-3, on average each channel connected 2 neighbors In MD-3 each antenna was connected at most 1 neighbor MD-3 reduced the degree of connectivity per node 4 sessions/pair of source & destination with different AC Each session is offered a load of 400 kbps Each UDP payload is 400 bytes long New sessions were introduced every 20 ms
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Simulation Result (3/3) AC = AC_VO Path length for O & MO-3 = 5 Avg path length for MD-3 = 8.5
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Simulation Result (3/3) AC = AC_VO Path length for O & MO-3 = 5 Avg path length for MD-3 = 8.5
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Simulation Result (3/3) AC = AC_VO Path length for O & MO-3 = 5 Avg path length for MD-3 = 8.5
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Conclusions If no route exists in configured directions, antennas may need to be redirected & it may be difficult with multiple fixed directional antennas Multiple fixed directional antennas may be expensive to buy & install A smart directional antenna can be an alternative solution at low cost The performance results encourages us to build a SAHN specific MAC protocol that is capable of integrating smart directional antennas efficiently
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Thank You ?
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