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On the Deployment of Wireless Sensor Networks

On the Deployment of Wireless Sensor Networks. Xin Liu Computer Science Department University of California, Davis Joint work with P. Mohapatra. Network Deployment. Many-to-one communication Data from all nodes directed to a sink node/fusion center Unbalanced traffic load

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On the Deployment of Wireless Sensor Networks

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  1. On the Deployment of Wireless Sensor Networks Xin Liu Computer Science Department University of California, Davis Joint work with P. Mohapatra Senmetrics

  2. Network Deployment • Many-to-one communication • Data from all nodes directed to a sink node/fusion center • Unbalanced traffic load • Uneven power consumption • Limitations on network lifetime if uniformly distributed • “Important” nodes in the route die quickly • Capacity bottleneck and Power bottleneck • Desire for long-lived sensor networks • Linear and planar networks Senmetrics

  3. Many-to-One Communication Senmetrics

  4. Precise vs. RandomDeployment • Precise deployment • With access • Expensive nodes • Higher layer of a hierarchical structure • Random deployment • No access • Cheap nodes • Lower layer of the hierarchy • Coverage and connectivity issues Senmetrics

  5. Objectives • Maximize coverage area • Given the desired lifetime and # of node available • Maximize the lifetime of the network • Given the number of nodes and coverage area • Minimize the number of nodes required • Given the coverage area and the desired lifetime • Consider large networks with long lifetime requirements Senmetrics

  6. Linear Networks • Why linear networks? • Applications: Traffic monitoring, border line control, train rail monitoring, etc. • Model narrow-and-long networks • Great Duck Island deployment • Tractability, insights for general cases • Highly asymmetric traffic load & location-dependent power consumption • Focus on communications • What options do we have? Senmetrics

  7. Possible Approaches • More energy for nodes with heavier load • More nodes in the area closer to the sink • Nodes closer to each other • Load balancing Deployment involves topology control, routing, power allocation Senmetrics

  8. System Model Senmetrics

  9. i Total Energy Constraint • Total energy constraint: • Energy can be arbitrarily allocated among nodes • The network dies when no energy left • Thus, Senmetrics

  10. Problem Formulation Numerical results as benchmark Senmetrics

  11. Individual power constraint • Arbitrary energy allocation is impractical • Performance benchmark • More realistic: homogenous individual energy constraint • Network lifetime: first node dies • Complexity: routing and associated power allocation options Senmetrics

  12. A Greedy Algorithm • Homogenous initial energy allocation • Observation: longer hops consume more energy • “jump” may not be a good idea • Observation: we do not want residual energy when the network dies. • Power consumption per unit time should be the same for all nodes • Consider large T (desired lifetime) Senmetrics

  13. A Greedy Algorithm Cont’d Senmetrics

  14. Benchmark vs. Greedy Senmetrics

  15. Cont’d Senmetrics

  16. Numerical Result Senmetrics

  17. Individual vs. greedy Senmetrics

  18. Observations • Good news: the effect of arbitrary energy allocation is negligible • Greedy performs very well • Conjecture: greedy is optimal in the case of individual energy constraints Senmetrics

  19. Closed-form for Greedy • Lifetime, nodes, and coverage • =4, 19% more node to double lifetime • =4, 138% more node to double coverage Senmetrics

  20. Other Power Consumption • Assume the same communication model • Consider receiving power, idling power, etc. • Assume negligible sensing/sleep power • Assume perfect synchronization • These power consumptions will decrease dramatically (hopefully) • Transmit at maximum power/rate • Keep awaking time as short as possible Senmetrics

  21. Other Power Consumption • The other power consumption is well modeled by a power efficiency factor. • Pmax: maximum transmission power by the antenna • Pa: power consumed by the transmitter other than the power emitted by the antenna • Pr: receiving power • Transmit at maximum rate, short duration, less energy consumption Senmetrics

  22. Power Attenuation Model • Decrease in transmission distance does not decrease per-bit energy consumption • Nodes very close • Limit on modulation and coding • A bound on the distance Senmetrics

  23. Performance Evaluation Senmetrics

  24. Non-uniform Data Density • Density varies over locations • Greedy scheme adapts well Senmetrics

  25. Non-uniform Density Cont’d • Greedy scheme performs well in the presence of estimation errors • <2% lifetime degradation • <1% additional nodes • Uniform deployment • Lifetime: 35% and 47% • Random deployment • <1% lifetime Senmetrics

  26. Planar Networks • Data within 2-D area is aggregated to a sink node • Much more complicated • Coverage • Potential triangular routes • Large search space • Heuristic solution based on insights from the linear network • Star mode • Linear approximation Senmetrics

  27. Conclusions • Data back-hauling in a many-to-one network • Traffic load vs. communication energy consumption • Optimal vs. greedy • Lifetime, # of nodes, and network coverage • Various issues: • Miscellaneous power consumption • Minimum distance constraint • Non-uniform data density • Future work: • Planar networks • Data compression and aggregation Senmetrics

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