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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Throughput enhancement through dynamic fragmentation in wireless LANs

TLDR
A rate-adaptive protocol with dynamic fragmentation is proposed to enhance the throughput based on fragment transmission bursts and channel information by using multiple thresholds for different data rates so more data can be transmitted at higher data rates when the channel is good.
Abstract
Many rate-adaptive MAC protocols have been proposed in the past for wireless local area networks (LANs) to enhance the throughput based on channel information. Most of these protocols are receiver based and employ the RTS/CTS collision avoidance handshake specified in the IEEE 802.11 standard. However, these protocols have not considered the possibility of bursty transmission of fragments in the corresponding rate adaptation schemes. In this article, a rate-adaptive protocol with dynamic fragmentation is proposed to enhance the throughput based on fragment transmission bursts and channel information. Instead of using one fragmentation threshold in the IEEE 802.11 standard, we propose to use multiple thresholds for different data rates so more data can be transmitted at higher data rates when the channel is good. In our proposed scheme, whenever the rate for the next transmission is chosen based on the channel information from the previous fragment transmission, a new fragment is then generated using the fragment threshold for the new rate. In this way, the channel condition can be more effectively used to squeeze more bits into the medium. We evaluate this scheme under a time-correlated fading channel model and show that the proposed scheme achieves much higher throughput than other rate-adaptive protocols.

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Citations
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IEEE 802.11b cooperative protocols: a performance study

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TL;DR: The proposed algorithm is an energy-efficient, generic CSMA/CA MAC protocol for wireless mobile computing applications, and enhances system goodput in ad hoc networks and vehicle-to-vehicle networks without modification of the base protocols.
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Analytical analysis of applying packet fragmentation mechanism on IEEE 802.11b DCF network in non ideal channel with infinite load conditions

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References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A rate-adaptive MAC protocol for multi-Hop wireless networks

TL;DR: This paper presents a rate adaptive MAC protocol called the Receiver-Based AutoRate (RBAR) protocol, based on the RTS/CTS mechanism, which can be incorporated into many medium access control protocols including the widely popular IEEE 802.11 protocol.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Opportunistic media access for multirate ad hoc networks

TL;DR: This paper describes mechanisms to implement OAR on top of any existing auto-rate adaptation scheme in a nearly IEEE 802.11 compliant manner, and analytically study OAR to characterize the gains in throughput as a function of the channel conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Goodput analysis and link adaptation for IEEE 802.11a wireless LANs

TL;DR: In-depth simulation shows that the proposed MPDU-based link adaptation scheme outperforms the single-mode schemes and the autorate fallback (ARF) scheme-which is used in Lucent Technologies' WaveLAN-II networking devices-significantly in terms of the average goodput, the frame drop rate, and the average number of transmission attempts per data frame delivery.