Author :
Wang, Zheng ; Sadjadpour, Hamid R. ; Garcia-Luna-Aceves, J.J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of California, Santa Cruz, CA, USA
Abstract :
We present capacity and delay scaling laws for random wireless ad hoc networks under all information dissemination modalities (unicast, multicast, broadcast and anycast) when nodes are endowed with multi-packet reception (MPR) capabilities. Information dissemination modalities are modeled with an (n, m, k)-cast formulation, where n, m, and k denote the number of nodes in the network, the number of destinations for each communication group, and the actual number of communication group members that receives the information (i. e., k ≤ m ≤ n), respectively. We show that Θ(R(n)\\√m/k), Θ(1/k), and Θ(R2(n)) bits per second constitute a tight bound for the throughput capacity of random wireless ad hoc networks under the protocol model when m = O(R-2(n)), Ω(k) = R-2(n)= O(m), and k = Ω(R-2(n)), respectively. R(n) denotes the receiver range which depends on the decoding complexity of the nodes. For the minimum receiver range of Θ(√(log n/n)) to guarantee network connectivity, a gain of Θ(log n) for (n, m, k)-casting is attained with MPR compared to the capacity attained when receivers can decode at most one transmission at a time in . Furthermore, we derive the capacity-delay tradeoff of (n, m, k)-casting when MPR is used. We show that the use of MPR can lead to both increased network capacity and reduced delays in wireless ad hoc networks.
Keywords :
ad hoc networks; decoding; protocols; capacity-delay tradeoff; decoding complexity; delay scaling law; information dissemination; information dissemination modality; multipacket reception; network connectivity; protocol model; wireless ad hoc networks; Scaling laws; multi-packet reception; network information theory;