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Proceedings ArticleDOI

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

TLDR
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.
Abstract: 
An ad hoc network may be logically represented as a set of clusters. The clusterheads form a d-hop dominating set. Each node is at most d hops from a clusterhead. Clusterheads form a virtual backbone and may be used to route packets for nodes in their cluster. Previous heuristics restricted themselves to 1-hop clusters. We show that the minimum d-hop dominating set problem is NP-complete. Then we present a heuristic to form d-clusters in a wireless ad hoc network. Nodes are assumed to have a non-deterministic mobility pattern. Clusters are formed by diffusing node identities along the wireless links. When the heuristic terminates, a node either becomes a clusterhead, or is at most d wireless hops away from its clusterhead. The value of d is a parameter of the heuristic. The heuristic can be run either at regular intervals, or whenever the network configuration changes. One of the features of the heuristic is that it tends to re-elect existing clusterheads even when the network configuration changes. This helps to reduce the communication overheads during transition from old clusterheads to new clusterheads. Also, there is a tendency to evenly distribute the mobile nodes among the clusterheads, and evently distribute the responsibility of acting as clusterheads among all nodes. Thus, the heuristic is fair and stable. Simulation experiments demonstrate that the proposed heuristic is better than the two earlier heuristics, namely the LCA and degree-based solutions.

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Journal Article

Comparison of Routing Protocols in WSN using NetSim Simulator: LEACH Vs LEACH-C

TL;DR: This paper has made an attempt to verify the inherent properties of two existing clustering routing protocols such as LEACH and LEACH-C in depth by using NetSim Simulator.

On the Selection of Cluster Heads in MANETs

TL;DR: It is shown that the problem of minimizing the set of cluster heads is NP-hard for both variants of the cluster head selection, and two distributed selection algorithms are proposed, each having logarithmic approximation ratio, for these variants.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Distribution of route requests using dominating-set neighbor elimination in an on-demand routing protocol

TL;DR: Detailed simulations are used to show that simply applying dominant pruning to the distribution of route requests in AODV results in pruning too many routes in the presence of mobility and cross-traffic, and introduces several heuristics to compensate the effects of DP.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Efficient Topology Design in Time-Evolving and Energy-Harvesting Wireless Sensor Networks

TL;DR: It is proved that the optimization problem of finding the optimal awake sensor set with the minimum total cost is NP-hard, and several topology design algorithms are proposed which can significantly reduce the total cost of topology while maintaining the connectivity over time.
Journal ArticleDOI

A multi-level clustering scheme based on cliques and clusters for wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: A new hierarchical partitioning scheme that takes into account the size of cliques and clusters, it also minimizes the number of hops between the cluster head and its nodes and improves the end-to-end delay compared to existing works.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

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