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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Fuzzy Logic Based Energy Aware Routing Protocol for Internet of Things

S. Sankar, +1 more
- 08 Oct 2018 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 10, pp 11-19
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TLDR
A fuzzy logic based energy aware routing protocol (FLEARPL), which considers the routing metrics load, residual energy (RER) and expected transmission count (ETX) for the best route selection and improves the network lifetime by 10-12% and packet delivery ratio by 2-5%.
Abstract
Maximizing the network lifetime is one of the major challenges in Low Power and Lossy Networks (LLN). Routing plays a major role in LLN, for minimizing the energy consumption across the network nodes. IPv6 Routing Protocol for Low Power and Lossy Networks (RPL) is a standardized routing protocol for LLN. Though, RPL fulfilled the necessity of LLN, several issues like increasing the energy efficiency, quality of service and the network lifetime are to be focused. In LNN, the inefficient route selection results in increased network traffic, energy depletion and packet loss ratio across the network. In this paper, we propose a fuzzy logic based energy aware routing protocol (FLEARPL), which considers the routing metrics load, residual energy (RER) and expected transmission count (ETX) for the best route selection. FLEA-RPL applies fuzzy logic over these metrics, to select the best route to transfer the network data efficiently. The COOJA simulator is used to assess the efficiency of the proposed FLEA-RPL. The FLEA-RPL protocol is compared with similar protocol standard RPL, MRHOF (ETX) based RPL (MRHOFRPL) and FL-RPL. The simulation result shows that FLEA-RPL improves the network lifetime by 10-12% and packet delivery ratio by 2-5%.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A comprehensive survey on enhancements and limitations of the RPL protocol: A focus on the objective function

TL;DR: A survey on existing objective functions in LLNs based on a set of metrics to help LLNs researchers’ community to easily understand the objective function concept and contributes to improving RPL in this context for further relevant research works.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Recent Survey on Internet of Things (IoT) Communication Protocols

TL;DR: Various communication protocols, namely Zigbee, Bluetooth, Near Field Communication (NFC), LoRA, etc. are presented, and the difference between different communication protocols is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

CT-RPL: Cluster Tree Based Routing Protocol to Maximize the Lifetime of Internet of Things.

TL;DR: The efficiency of a CT-RPL is compared with the Routing Protocol for Low Power and Lossy Networks (RPL) and energy-efficient heterogeneous ring clustering routing (E2HRC-R PL), which reduces the traffic load and decreases the packet loss ratio.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Efficient Design of RPL Objective Function for Routing in Internet of Things using Fuzzy Logic

TL;DR: An enhanced object functions (OF) is proposed namely; OFRRT-FUZZY relying on several metrics combined using Fuzzy Logic combining node and link metrics to overcome the limitations of using a single metric.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A high-throughput path metric for multi-hop wireless routing

TL;DR: Measurements taken from a 29-node 802.11b test-bed demonstrate the poor performance of minimum hop-count, illustrate the causes of that poor performance, and confirm that ETX improves performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey on Internet of Things: Architecture, Enabling Technologies, Security and Privacy, and Applications

TL;DR: The relationship between cyber-physical systems and IoT, both of which play important roles in realizing an intelligent cyber- physical world, are explored and existing architectures, enabling technologies, and security and privacy issues in IoT are presented to enhance the understanding of the state of the art IoT development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Challenging the IPv6 Routing Protocol for Low-Power and Lossy Networks (RPL): A Survey

TL;DR: This paper reviewed over 97 RPL-related academic research papers published by major academic publishers and presented a topic-oriented survey for these research efforts, finding that only 40.2% of the papers evaluate RPL through experiments using implementations on real embedded devices.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Standards for Machine-to-Machine and the Internet of Things

TL;DR: This paper surveys the—;admittedly babelian—standardization landscape of IoT and presents its major efforts and concludes with a comparative discussion that highlights the key challenges of future standardization in IoT.
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