Abstract :
In our basic model, we study a stationary Poisson pattern of nodes on a line embedded in an independent planar Poisson field of interfering nodes. Assuming slotted Aloha and the signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio capture condition, with the usual power-law path loss model and Rayleigh fading, we explicitly evaluate several local and end-to-end performance characteristics related to the nearest-neighbor packet relaying on this line, and study their dependence on the model parameters (the density of relaying and interfering nodes, Aloha tuning and the external noise power). Our model can be applied in two cases. The first use is for vehicular ad-hoc networks, where vehicles are randomly located on a straight road. The second use is to study a “typical” route traced in a (general) planar ad-hoc network by some routing mechanism. The approach we have chosen allows us to quantify the non-efficiency of long-distance routing in “pure ad-hoc” networks and evaluate a possible remedy for it in the form of additional “fixed” relaying nodes, called road-side units in a vehicular network. It also allows us to consider a more general field of interfering nodes and study the impact of the clustering of its nodes on the routing performance. As a special case of a field with more clustering than the Poison field, we consider a Poisson-line field of interfering nodes, in which all the nodes are randomly located on random straight lines. In this case, our analysis rigorously (in the sense of Palm theory) corresponds to the typical route of this network. The comparison to our basic model reveals a paradox: clustering of interfering nodes decreases the outage probability of a single (typical) transmission on the route, but increases the mean end-to-end delay.
Keywords :
access protocols; probability; radiofrequency interference; relay networks (telecommunication); routing protocols; telecommunication network reliability; vehicular ad hoc networks; Rayleigh fading; interferer general field; interfering node planar Poisson field; node clustering; outage probability; power-law path loss model; random linear multihop relaying; road side unit; routing mechanism; signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio capture condition; slotted Aloha; spatial Aloha; stationary Poisson pattern; vehicular ad hoc network; Ad hoc networks; Delays; Interference; Mobile computing; Routing; Signal to noise ratio; Aloha; Laplace; MANET; Poisson; Poisson-line process; SINR; VANET; clustering; comparison; end-to-end delay; endto- end delay; road-side units; routing;