DocumentCode
2669755
Title
A Performance Study of Deployment Factors in Wireless Mesh Networks
Author
Robinson, Joshua ; Knightly, Edward W.
Author_Institution
Rice Univ., Houston
fYear
2007
fDate
6-12 May 2007
Firstpage
2054
Lastpage
2062
Abstract
We present a measurement-parameterized performance study of deployment factors in wireless mesh networks using three performance metrics: client coverage area, backhaul tier connectivity, and fair mesh capacity. For each metric, we identify and study topology factors and architectural features which strongly influence mesh performance via an extensive set of Monte Carlo simulations capturing realistic physical layer behavior. Our findings include: (i) A random topology is unsuitable for a large-scale mesh deployment due to doubled node density requirements, yet a moderate level of perturbations from ideal grid placement has a minor impact on performance. (ii) Multiple backhaul radios per mesh node is a cost-effective deployment strategy as it leads to mesh deployments costing 50% less than with a single-radio architecture, (iii) Dividing access and backhaul connections onto two separate radios does not use the second radio efficiently as it only improves fair mesh capacity 40% to 80% for most users. This is in contrast to using the second radio to move half the user population to a new network operated on the second radio. This work adds to the understanding of mesh deployment factors and their general impact on performance, providing further insight into practical mesh deployments.
Keywords
Monte Carlo methods; radio networks; telecommunication network topology; Monte Carlo simulation; backhaul tier connectivity; client coverage area; measurement-parameterized performance study; wireless mesh network; Area measurement; Costs; Degradation; IP networks; Large-scale systems; Mesh networks; Network topology; Peer to peer computing; Telecommunication traffic; Wireless mesh networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
INFOCOM 2007. 26th IEEE International Conference on Computer Communications. IEEE
Conference_Location
Anchorage, AK
ISSN
0743-166X
Print_ISBN
1-4244-1047-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/INFCOM.2007.238
Filename
4215820
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