DocumentCode :
1340988
Title :
Optimal Hop Distance and Power Control for a Single Cell, Dense, Ad Hoc Wireless Network
Author :
Ramaiyan, Venkatesh ; Kumar, Anurag ; Altman, Eitan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Indian Inst. of Technol. Madras, Chennai, India
Volume :
11
Issue :
11
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
1601
Lastpage :
1612
Abstract :
We consider a dense, ad hoc wireless network, confined to a small region. The wireless network is operated as a single cell, i.e., only one successful transmission is supported at a time. Data packets are sent between source-destination pairs by multihop relaying. We assume that nodes self-organize into a multihop network such that all hops are of length d meters, where d is a design parameter. There is a contention-based multiaccess scheme, and it is assumed that every node always has data to send, either originated from it or a transit packet (saturation assumption). In this scenario, we seek to maximize a measure of the transport capacity of the network (measured in bit-meters per second) over power controls (in a fading environment) and over the hop distance d, subject to an average power constraint. We first motivate that for a dense collection of nodes confined to a small region, single cell operation is efficient for single user decoding transceivers. Then, operating the dense ad hoc wireless network (described above) as a single cell, we study the hop length and power control that maximizes the transport capacity for a given network power constraint. More specifically, for a fading channel and for a fixed transmission time strategy (akin to the IEEE 802.11 TXOP), we find that there exists an intrinsic aggregate bit rate (Theta_{opt} bits per second, depending on the contention mechanism and the channel fading characteristics) carried by the network, when operating at the optimal hop length and power control. The optimal transport capacity is of the form d_{opt}(bar{P_t}) times Theta_{opt} with d_{opt} scaling as bar{P_t}^{{1over eta}}, where bar{P_t} is the available time average transmit power and eta is the path loss exponent. Under certain conditions on the fading distribution, we then provide a simple characterization of the optimal operating point. Simulation results are provided comparing the performance of the optimal strategy derived here w- th some simple strategies for operating the network.
Keywords :
ad hoc networks; decoding; fading channels; transceivers; 6optimal hop distance; IEEE 802.11 TXOP; ad hoc wireless network; average power constraint; channel fading characteristics; contention-based multiaccess scheme; data packets; decoding transceivers; dense collection; dense network; design parameter; fading environment; fixed transmission time strategy; multihop network; multihop relaying; network power constraint; optimal transport capacity; power controls; saturation assumption; self-organizing nodes; single cell network; source-destination pairs; transit packet; Ad hoc networks; Fading; IEEE 802.11 Standards; Power control; Spread spectrum communication; Throughput; Wireless networks; Multihop relaying; cross-layer optimization;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Mobile Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1536-1233
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TMC.2011.204
Filename :
6035712
Link To Document :
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