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A Comprehensive Analysis of the MAC Unreliability Problem in IEEE 802.15.4 Wireless Sensor Networks

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TLDR
It is found that, with a more appropriate MAC parameters setting, it is possible to mitigate the problem of unreliability of IEEE 802.15.4 WSNs and achieve a delivery ratio up to 100%, at least in the scenarios considered in this paper.
Abstract
Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) represent a very promising solution in the field of wireless technologies for industrial applications. However, for a credible deployment of WSNs in an industrial environment, four main properties need to be fulfilled, i.e., energy efficiency, scalability, reliability, and timeliness. In this paper, we focus on IEEE 802.15.4 WSNs and show that they can suffer from a serious unreliability problem. This problem arises whenever the power management mechanism is enabled for energy efficiency, and results in a very low packet delivery ratio, also when the number of sensor nodes in the network is very low (e.g., 5). We carried out an extensive analysis-based on both simulation and experiments on a real WSN-to investigate the fundamental reasons of this problem, and we found that it is caused by the contention-based Medium Access Control (MAC) protocol used for channel access and its default parameter values. We also found that, with a more appropriate MAC parameters setting, it is possible to mitigate the problem and achieve a delivery ratio up to 100%, at least in the scenarios considered in this paper. However, this improvement in communication reliability is achieved at the cost of an increased latency, which may not be acceptable for industrial applications with stringent timing requirements. In addition, in some cases this is possible only by choosing MAC parameter values formally not allowed by the standard.

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A Critical Analysis of Research Potential, Challenges, and Future Directives in Industrial Wireless Sensor Networks

TL;DR: A thorough review of the existing standards and industrial protocols is presented and a critical evaluation of potential of these standards and protocols are given along with a detailed discussion on available hardware platforms, specific industrial energy harvesting techniques and their capabilities.
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Data Cleaning for RFID and WSN Integration

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Reliability and Energy-Efficiency inIEEE 802.15.4/ZigBee Sensor Networks:An Adaptive and Cross-Layer Approach

TL;DR: This paper proposes an adaptive and cross-layer framework for reliable and energy-efficient data collection in WSNs based on the IEEE 802.15.4/ZigBee standards, and proposes a low-complexity distributed algorithm, called ADaptive Access Parameters Tuning (ADAPT), that can effectively meet the application-specific reliability under a wide range of operating conditions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wireless sensor networks: a survey

TL;DR: The concept of sensor networks which has been made viable by the convergence of micro-electro-mechanical systems technology, wireless communications and digital electronics is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Medium access control with coordinated adaptive sleeping for wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: This paper proposes S-MAC, a medium access control (MAC) protocol designed for wireless sensor networks that enables low-duty-cycle operation in a multihop network and reveals fundamental tradeoffs on energy, latency and throughput.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy conservation in wireless sensor networks: A survey

TL;DR: This paper breaks down the energy consumption for the components of a typical sensor node, and discusses the main directions to energy conservation in WSNs, and presents a systematic and comprehensive taxonomy of the energy conservation schemes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Packet Switching in Radio Channels: Part I--Carrier Sense Multiple-Access Modes and Their Throughput-Delay Characteristics

TL;DR: Two protocols are described for CSMA and their throughput-delay characteristics are given and results show the large advantage CSMA provides as compared to the random ALOHA access modes.
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Editorial: wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: The state-of-the-art protocol for WSN protocol stack is explored for transport, routing, data link and physical layers, and the open research issues are discussed for each of the protocol layers.
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