Title :
Low power TDMA in large wireless sensor networks
Author :
Pei, Guangyu ; Chien, Charles
Author_Institution :
Rockwell Sci. Co., Thousand Oaks, CA, USA
Abstract :
In this paper we present a novel TDMA scheme for a large population of sensors interconnected by a wireless multihop network. Applications of this wireless sensor network include battlefield surveillance, space exploration and condition based monitoring. Key characteristics of this system are the large number of sensor nodes and the need to rely on battery operation for a long period of time. Since communication is a major consumer of energy, low power communication protocols play a critical role in wireless sensor networks and have significant impact on the overall energy dissipation of these networked systems. This paper focuses on an energy efficient TDMA protocol, power aware clustered TDMA (PACT), that adapts the duly cycle to the user traffic. In other words, the radio is powered off if the network is inactive. Moreover, we apply passive clustering to take advantage of the redundant dense topology and prolong the lifetime of the entire network even further. At a given time, only a subset of network nodes (i.e., cluster heads and gateways) participates in the communication. The role of cluster heads and gateways is rotated according to their energy levels. The clustering requires no explicit control messages and therefore incurs negligible energy overhead. Using the proposed protocol, simulation and analytical results show significant improvement in energy saving and network lifetime.
Keywords :
LAN interconnection; distributed sensors; military communication; network topology; packet radio networks; power consumption; telecommunication traffic; time division multiple access; PACT; adaptive duty cycle; battlefield surveillance; cluster heads; condition based monitoring; energy dissipation; gateways; large wireless sensor networks; low power communication protocols; network lifetime; passive clustering; power aware clustered TDMA; redundant dense topology; space exploration; user traffic; wireless multihop network; Condition monitoring; Power system interconnection; Protocols; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Sensor systems; Space exploration; Spread spectrum communication; Surveillance; Time division multiple access; Wireless sensor networks;
Conference_Titel :
Military Communications Conference, 2001. MILCOM 2001. Communications for Network-Centric Operations: Creating the Information Force. IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7225-5
DOI :
10.1109/MILCOM.2001.985817