Title :
Optimized Scheduled Multiple Access Control for Wireless Sensor Networks
Author :
Paschalidis, Ioannis Ch ; Lai, Wei ; Song, Xiangdong
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Boston Univ., Boston, MA, USA
Abstract :
We consider wireless sensor networks with multiple sensor modalities that capture data to be transported over multiple frequency channels to potentially multiple gateways. We study a general problem of maximizing a utility function of achievable transmission rates between communicating nodes. Decisions involve routing, transmission scheduling, power control, and channel selection, while constraints include physical communication constraints, interference constraints, and fairness constraints. Due to its structure the formulation grows exponentially with the size of the network. Drawing upon large-scale decomposition ideas in mathematical programming, we develop a cutting-plane algorithm and show that it terminates in a finite number of iterations. Every iteration requires the solution of a subproblem which is NP-hard. To solve the subproblem we i) devise a particular relaxation that is solvable in polynomial time and ii) leverage polynomial-time approximation schemes. A combination of both approaches enables an improved decomposition algorithm which is efficient for solving large problem instances.
Keywords :
computational complexity; iterative methods; mathematical programming; scheduling; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network routing; wireless sensor networks; NP-hard problem; channel selection; cutting-plane algorithm; fairness constraints; improved decomposition algorithm; interference constraints; iteration method; mathematical programming; multiple frequency channels; multiple gateways; multiple sensor modalities; optimized scheduled multiple access control; physical communication constraints; polynomial-time approximation schemes; power control; transmission scheduling; wireless sensor networks; Access control; Frequency; Interference constraints; Large-scale systems; Polynomials; Power control; Power engineering and energy; Routing; Systems engineering and theory; Throughput; Wireless sensor networks; Mathematical programming/optimization; multiple frequency channels; routing; transmission scheduling; wireless sensor networks;
Journal_Title :
Automatic Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAC.2009.2031210