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Journal ArticleDOI

Performance comparison of battery power consumption in wireless multiple access protocols

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TLDR
The analysis here shows that protocols that aim to reduce the number of contentions perform better from an energy consumption perspective, although the receiver usage time, however, tends to be higher for protocols that require the mobile to sense the medium before attempting transmission.
Abstract
Energy efficiency is an important issue in mobile wireless networks since the battery life of mobile terminals is limited. Conservation of battery power has been addressed using many techniques such as variable speed CPUs, flash memory, disk spindowns, and so on. We believe that energy conservation should be an important factor in the design of networking protocols for mobile wireless networks. In particular, this paper addresses energy efficiency in medium access control (MAC) protocols for wireless networks. The paper develops a framework to study the energy consumption of a MAC protocol from the transceiver usage perspective. This framework is then applied to compare the performance of a set of protocols that includes IEEE 802.11, EC‐MAC, PRMA, MDR‐TDMA, and DQRUMA*. The performance metrics considered are transmitter and receiver usage times for packet transmission and reception. The time estimates are then combined with power ratings for a Proxim RangeLAN2 radio card to obtain an estimate of the energy consumed for MAC related activities. The analysis here shows that protocols that aim to reduce the number of contentions perform better from an energy consumption perspective. The receiver usage time, however, tends to be higher for protocols that require the mobile to sense the medium before attempting transmission. The paper also provides a set of principles that could be applied when designing access protocols for wireless networks.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Energy Efficient Network Protocols for Wireless Networks

TL;DR: A comprehensive summary of recent work addressing energy efficient and low-power design within all layers of the wireless network protocol stack of wireless networks is presented.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

WiseMAC: an ultra low power MAC protocol for the downlink of infrastructure wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: It is shown that WiseMAC can provide a significantly lower power consumption for the same delay than the power management protocol used in the IEEE 802.15.4 ZigBee standard.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Minimizing energy for wireless web access with bounded slowdown

TL;DR: The Bounded Slowdown protocol is presented, a PSM that dynamically adapts to network activity that reduces average Web page retrieval times by 5--64%, while simultaneously reducing energy consumption by 1--14% and by 13X compared to no power management.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Random key-assignment for secure Wireless Sensor Networks

TL;DR: A probabilistic model and two protocols to establish a secure pair-wise communication channel between any pair of sensors in the WSN, by assigning a small set of random keys to each sensor, are described.
References
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Book

Simulation Modeling and Analysis

TL;DR: The text is designed for a one-term or two-quarter course in simulation offered in departments of industrial engineering, business, computer science and operations research.
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.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Power-aware routing in mobile ad hoc networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a case for using new power-aware metn.cs for determining routes in wireless ad hoc networks and show that using these new metrics ensures that the mean time to node failure is increased si~cantly.
Journal ArticleDOI

PAMAS—power aware multi-access protocol with signalling for ad hoc networks

TL;DR: A new multiaccess protocol based on the original MACA protocol with the adition of a separate signalling channel that conserves battery power at nodes by intelligently powering off nodes that are not actively transmitting or receiving packets.
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