Search results for "medium access control"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

MAC Protocols for Wake-up Radio: Principles, Modeling and Performance Analysis

2018

[EN] In wake-up radio (WuR) enabled wireless sensor networks (WSNs), a node triggers a data communication at any time instant by sending a wake-up call (WuC) in an on-demand manner. Such wake-up operations eliminate idle listening and overhearing burden for energy consumption in duty-cycled WSNs. Although WuR exhibits its superiority for light traffic, it is inefficient to handle high traffic load in a network. This paper makes an effort towards improving the performance of WuR under diverse load conditions with a twofold contribution. We first propose three protocols that support variable traffic loads by enabling respectively clear channel assessment (CCA), backoff plus CCA, and adaptive …

Computer scienceWireless sensor networks (WSNs)02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesWake-up radio (WuR)Medium access control (MAC) protocol0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringElectrical and Electronic EngineeringLatency (engineering)QueueEnergy-efficient communicationbusiness.industryNode (networking)010401 analytical chemistryComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKS020206 networking & telecommunicationsEnergy consumptionINGENIERIA TELEMATICA0104 chemical sciencesComputer Science ApplicationsInternet of Things (IoT)Variable (computer science)Modeling and performance evaluationControl and Systems EngineeringbusinessWireless sensor networkInformation SystemsComputer networkEfficient energy useData transmission
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A performance analysis of block ACK scheme for IEEE 802.11e networks

2010

The demand for the IEEE 802.11 wireless local-area networks (WLANs) has been drastically increasing along with many emerging applications and services over WLAN. However, the IEEE 802.11 medium access control (MAC) is known to be limited in terms of its throughput performance due to the high MAC overhead, such as interframe spaces (IFS) or per-frame based acknowledgement (ACK) frame transmissions. The IEEE 802.11e MAC introduces the block ACK scheme for improving the system efficiency of the WLAN. Using the block ACK scheme can reduce the ACK transmission overhead by integrating multiple ACKs for a number of data frames into a bitmap that is contained in a block ACK frame, thus increasing t…

IEEE 802Settore ING-INF/03 - TelecomunicazioniComputer Networks and CommunicationsComputer sciencebusiness.industryComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSAcknowledgementFrame (networking)medium access controlThroughputCode rateWireless lanOverhead (computing)Wirelessperformance analysisbusinesswireless lanBlock (data storage)Computer networkComputer Networks
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A space-division time-division multiple access scheme for high throughput provisioning in WLANs

2005

Directional antennas may dramatically increase the capacity of a Wireless LAN by allowing several stations to simultaneously communicate. Since deployment of directive/smart antennas on the customer's terminals is awkward (for technological, cost, robustness, and convenience reasons) it is of interest to deploy advanced antenna solutions only at the Access Point. When omnidirectional transmissions are used at the Mobile Stations, the asynchronous nature of the 802.11 MAC handshake structurally limits the possibility to exploit spatial reuse. Significant throughput enhancements can be achieved only at the expense of redesigning (part of) the 802.11 MAC protocol: mainly a form of synchronizat…

Mobile radioDirectional antennaComputer sciencebusiness.industryComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSTime division multiple accessSmart antennaMedium access controlThroughputSpace-division multiple accessInterference (wave propagation)Backward compatibilityAsynchronous communicationWireless landirectional antennaDirective antennasbusinessOmnidirectional antennaComputer network
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Opportunistic Synchronization for Improving IEEE 802.15.4 MAC Performance in Chain Topologies

2010

The most effective solution for energy saving in low-rate wireless sensor networks is maintaining each node in a doze state as long as possible. In order to guarantee network connectivity, the intervals at which the network sensors are turned on and off have to be coordinated. Therefore, synchronization is a very critical function for sensor networks. In this paper, we analyze the IEEE 802.15.4 MAC performance in sensor networks deployed in a chain topology. For this topology, critical inefficiencies can arise in case of multi-hop packet deliveries. We evaluate the impact of different synchronization schemes on the network performance, both in terms of network throughput and in terms of ene…

sensor networks medium access control energy savingSettore ING-INF/04 - AutomaticaSettore ING-INF/03 - Telecomunicazioni
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