DocumentCode :
3320240
Title :
Dominating connectivity and reliability of heterogeneous sensor networks
Author :
Berman, Kenneth A. ; Annexstein, Fred S. ; Ranganathan, Aravind
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Cincinnati Univ., OH
fYear :
2006
fDate :
13-17 March 2006
Lastpage :
95
Abstract :
Consider a placement of heterogeneous, wireless sensors that can vary the transmission range by increasing or decreasing power. The problem of determining an optimal assignment of transmission radii, so that the resulting network is strongly-connected and more generally k-connected has been studied in the literature. In traditional k-connectedness, the network is able resist the failure of up to k - 1 nodes anywhere in the network, and still remain strongly-connected. In this paper we introduce a much stronger k-connectedness property, which we show can be implemented efficiently, and without great increase in the radii of transmission needed to simply achieve connectedness. We say that a network is dominating k-connected if, for any simultaneous failure of nodes throughout the network, with at most k - 1 nodes failures occurring in the out-neighborhood any surviving (up) node, the set U of up nodes forms a dominating set and induces a strongly-connected subdigraph. In this paper, we give a simple characterization of the networks that are dominating k-connected and design an associated efficient algorithm for determining the dominating connectivity, i.e., the maximum k such that the network is dominating k-connected. We also present an efficient algorithm for computing an assignment of transmission radii that results in a dominating k-connected network which minimizes the maximum radius. Furthermore, we show that the maximum radius in this assignment is no more than a multiplicative factor of k greater than the percolation radius rhoperc, i.e., the minimum that the maximum transmission radius can be so that the network remains connected. We show through empirical testing that this multiplicative factor can, in practice, be considerably less than k and only slightly greater than that required to achieve traditional k-connectedness. Finally, we show that for sensors placed on the lattice points of a two-dimensional square, we can achieve dominating k-connec- - tedness with a multiplicative factor of at most radic2[radick + .5] greater than rhoperc
Keywords :
graph theory; telecommunication network reliability; wireless sensor networks; dominating connectivity; dominating k-connected network; dominating reliability; dominating set; heterogeneous sensor networks; heterogeneous wireless sensors; maximum transmission radius; optimal assignment; strongly-connected subdigraph; transmission radii; Algorithm design and analysis; Computer networks; Costs; Lattices; Resists; Spread spectrum communication; Testing; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Pervasive Computing and Communications Workshops, 2006. PerCom Workshops 2006. Fourth Annual IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Pisa
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2520-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PERCOMW.2006.44
Filename :
1598945
Link To Document :
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