DocumentCode :
623614
Title :
TriggerCas: Enabling wireless consrucive collisions
Author :
Yin Wang ; Yuan He ; Dapeng Cheng ; Yunhao Liu ; Xiang-Yang Li
Author_Institution :
MOE Key Lab. for Inf. Syst. Security, Tsinghua Univ., Beijing, China
fYear :
2013
fDate :
14-19 April 2013
Firstpage :
480
Lastpage :
484
Abstract :
Constructive Interference (CI) proposed in the existing work (e.g., A-MAC [1], Glossy [2]) may degrade the packet reception performance in terms of Packet Reception Ratio (PRR) and Received Signal Strength Indication (RSSI). The packet reception performance of a set of nodes transmitting simultaneously might be no better than that of any single node transmitting individually. In this paper, we redefine CI and propose TriggerCast, a practical wireless architecture which ensures concurrent transmissions of an identical packet to interfere constructively rather than to interfere non-destructively. CI potentially allows orders of magnitude reductions in energy consumption and improvements in link quality. Moreover, we for the first time present a theoretical sufficient condition for generating CI with IEEE 802.15.4 radio: concurrent transmissions with an identical packet should be synchronized at chip level. Meanwhile, co-senders participating in concurrent transmissions should be carefully selected, and the starting instants for the concurrent transmissions should be aligned. Based on the sufficient condition, we propose practical techniques to effectively compensate propagation and radio processing delays. TriggerCast has 95th percentile synchronization errors of at most 250ns. Extensive experiments in practical testbeds reveal that TriggerCast significantly improves PRR (from 5% to 70% with 7 concurrent senders, from 50% to 98.3% with 6 senders) and RSSI (about 6dB with 5 senders).
Keywords :
Zigbee; radiofrequency interference; radiowave propagation; wireless sensor networks; CI; IEEE 802.15.4 radio; PRR; RSSI; TriggerCast; WSN; chip level; concurrent transmissions; constructive interference; energy consumption; identical packet; link quality improvement; magnitude reductions; packet reception performance degradation; packet reception ratio; propagation compensation; radio processing delay compensation; received signal strength indication; wireless architecture; wireless constructive collisions; wireless sensor networks; Delays; IEEE 802.15 Standards; Receivers; Signal to noise ratio; Synchronization; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM, 2013 Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location :
Turin
ISSN :
0743-166X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-5944-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOM.2013.6566819
Filename :
6566819
Link To Document :
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