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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Distributed clustering in ad-hoc sensor networks: a hybrid, energy-efficient approach

O. Younis, +1 more
- Vol. 1, pp 629-640
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TLDR
A protocol is presented, HEED (hybrid energy-efficient distributed clustering), that periodically selects cluster heads according to a hybrid of their residual energy and a secondary parameter, such as node proximity to its neighbors or node degree, which outperforms weight-based clustering protocols in terms of several cluster characteristics.
Abstract
Prolonged network lifetime, scalability, and load balancing are important requirements for many ad-hoc sensor network applications. Clustering sensor nodes is an effective technique for achieving these goals. In this work, we propose a new energy-efficient approach for clustering nodes in ad-hoc sensor networks. Based on this approach, we present a protocol, HEED (hybrid energy-efficient distributed clustering), that periodically selects cluster heads according to a hybrid of their residual energy and a secondary parameter, such as node proximity to its neighbors or node degree. HEED does not make any assumptions about the distribution or density of nodes, or about node capabilities, e.g., location-awareness. The clustering process terminates in O(1) iterations, and does not depend on the network topology or size. The protocol incurs low overhead in terms of processing cycles and messages exchanged. It also achieves fairly uniform cluster head distribution across the network. A careful selection of the secondary clustering parameter can balance load among cluster heads. Our simulation results demonstrate that HEED outperforms weight-based clustering protocols in terms of several cluster characteristics. We also apply our approach to a simple application to demonstrate its effectiveness in prolonging the network lifetime and supporting data aggregation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

HEED: a hybrid, energy-efficient, distributed clustering approach for ad hoc sensor networks

TL;DR: It is proved that, with appropriate bounds on node density and intracluster and intercluster transmission ranges, HEED can asymptotically almost surely guarantee connectivity of clustered networks.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Joint mobility and routing for lifetime elongation in wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: This paper suggests that the base station be mobile; in this way, the nodes located close to it change over time and the obtained improvement in terms of network lifetime is in the order of 500%.
Journal ArticleDOI

In-network aggregation techniques for wireless sensor networks: a survey

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the existing literature on techniques and protocols for in-network aggregation in wireless sensor networks is provided, and suitable criteria to classify existing solutions are defined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Node clustering in wireless sensor networks: recent developments and deployment challenges

TL;DR: The challenges in clustering a WSN are highlighted, the design rationale of the different clustering approaches are discussed, and the proposed approaches are classified based on their objectives and design principles.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Max-min d-cluster formation in wireless ad hoc networks

TL;DR: A heuristic to form d-clusters in a wireless ad hoc network that tends to re-elect existing clusterheads even when the network configuration changes and has a tendency to evenly distribute the mobile nodes among the clusterheads, and evently distribute the responsibility of acting as clusterheads among all nodes.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

PEAS: a robust energy conserving protocol for long-lived sensor networks

TL;DR: A robust energy-conserving protocol that can build long-lived, resilient sensor networks using a very large number of small sensors with short battery lifetime, PEAS can extend a sensor network's functioning time in linear proportion to the deployed sensor population.
Journal ArticleDOI

ASCENT: Adaptive Self-Configuring sEnsor Network Topologies

TL;DR: The ASCENT algorithm is motivated and described and it is shown that the system achieves linear increase in energy savings as a function of the density and the convergence time required in case of node failures while still providing adequate connectivity.

Power Control in Ad-Hoc Networks : Theory, Architecture Algorithm and Implementation of the COMPOW protocol

TL;DR: The solution is shown to simultaneously satisfy the three objectives of maximizing the traffic carrying capacity of the entire network, extending battery life through providing low power routes, and reducing the contention at the MAC layer.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Rumor routing algorthim for sensor networks

TL;DR: Rumor Routing is tunable, and allows for tradeoffs between setup overhead and delivery reliability, and is intended for contexts in which geographic routing criteria are not applicable because a coordinate system is not available or the phenomenon of interest is not geographically correlated.
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