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Journal ArticleDOI

Monitoring of Large-Area IoT Sensors Using a LoRa Wireless Mesh Network System: Design and Evaluation

TLDR
This is the first academic study discussing LoRa mesh networking in detail and evaluating its performance via real experiments, and it is shown that in urban areas, LoRa requires dense deployment of LoRa gateways to ensure that indoor LoRa devices can successfully transfer data back to remote GWs.
Abstract
Although many techniques exist to transfer data from the widely distributed sensors that make up the Internet of Things (IoT) (e.g., using 3G/4G networks or cables), these methods are associated with prohibitively high costs, making them impractical for real-life applications. Recently, several emerging wireless technologies have been proposed to provide long-range communication for IoT sensors. Among these, LoRa has been examined for long-range performance. Although LoRa shows good performance for long-range transmission in the countryside, its radio signals can be attenuated over distance, and buildings, trees, and other radio signal sources may interfere with the signals. Our observations show that in urban areas, LoRa requires dense deployment of LoRa gateways (GWs) to ensure that indoor LoRa devices can successfully transfer data back to remote GWs. Wireless mesh networking is a solution for increasing communication range and packet delivery ratio (PDR) without the need to install additional GWs. This paper presents a LoRa mesh networking system for large-area monitoring of IoT applications. We deployed 19 LoRa mesh networking devices over an $800\,\,\text {m} \times 600$ m area on our university campus and installed a GW that collected data at 1-min intervals. The proposed LoRa mesh networking system achieved an average 88.49% PDR, whereas the star-network topology used by LoRa achieved only 58.7% under the same settings. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first academic study discussing LoRa mesh networking in detail and evaluating its performance via real experiments.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Towards Energy Efficient LoRa Multihop Networks

TL;DR: An adaptation of the well-known Time Slotted Channel Hopping (TSCH) Medium Access Control (MAC) protocol, which was initially specified for IEEE 802.15.4 based networks, for operation over the LoRa PHY layer is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

LDAP: Lightweight Dynamic Auto-Reconfigurable Protocol in an IoT-Enabled WSN for Wide-Area Remote Monitoring

Gazi M. E. Rahman, +1 more
- 24 Sep 2020 - 
TL;DR: A lightweight, dynamic, and auto-reconfigurable communication protocol (LDAP) for Wide-Area Remote Monitoring (WARM) applications that has a mobile data sink for wider WSN coverage, andAuto-re configuration capability to cope with the dynamic network topology required for device mobility is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Performance Evaluation of ESP8266 Mesh Networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the performance of the painlessMesh network in terms of one-way delay and data rate, and show that a 2-node network has a delay of 2.49 ms and a data rate of 461 ms.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Novel Fair and Scalable Relay Control Scheme for Internet of Things in LoRa-Based Low-Power Wide-Area Networks

TL;DR: It is verified that the proposed FSRC scheme achieves a maximum of approximately 37% and 33% improvement of the minimum success probability and coverage probability, respectively, under practical LoRa PHY/MAC parameters, compared to the single-hop environment (without relay operation).
Journal ArticleDOI

Multi-hop communication protocol for LoRa with software-defined networking extension

TL;DR: Performance evaluation has shown that the proposed protocol and its SDN-based extension can match the coverage of LoRa PHY layer setting that offers maximum coverage at a relatively very high data rate and lower energy consumption.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

THE ALOHA SYSTEM: another alternative for computer communications

TL;DR: A remote-access computer system under development as part of a research program to investigate the use of radio communications for computer-computer and console-computer links and a novel form of random-access radio communications developed for use within THE ALOHA SYSTEM is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Study of LoRa: Long Range & Low Power Networks for the Internet of Things

TL;DR: An overview of LoRa and an in-depth analysis of its functional components are provided and some possible solutions for performance enhancements are proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-range communications in unlicensed bands: the rising stars in the IoT and smart city scenarios

TL;DR: This article introduces a new type of wireless connectivity, characterized by low-rate, long-range transmission technologies in the unlicensed sub-gigahertz frequency bands, used to realize access networks with star topology referred to as low-power WANs (LPWANs).
Posted Content

Long-Range Communications in Unlicensed Bands: the Rising Stars in the IoT and Smart City Scenarios

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a new approach to provide connectivity in the IoT scenario, discussing its advantages over the established paradigms in terms of efficiency, effectiveness, and architectural design, in particular for the typical Smart Cities applications.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the coverage of LPWANs: range evaluation and channel attenuation model for LoRa technology

TL;DR: This work studies the coverage of the recently developed LoRa LPWAN technology via real-life measurements and presents a channel attenuation model derived from the measurement data that can be used to estimate the path loss in 868 MHz ISM band in an area similar to Oulu, Finland.
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