1 / 28

Anand Prabhu Subramanian and Samir R. Das {anandps, samir@cs.sunysb}

Addressing Deafness and Hidden Terminal Problem in Directional Antenna Based Wireless Multi-hop Networks. Anand Prabhu Subramanian and Samir R. Das {anandps, samir@cs.sunysb.edu} Computer Science Department Stony Brook University, NY, USA. Outline. Motivation – Why Directional Communication?

cian
Download Presentation

Anand Prabhu Subramanian and Samir R. Das {anandps, samir@cs.sunysb}

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Addressing Deafness and Hidden Terminal Problem in Directional Antenna Based Wireless Multi-hop Networks Anand Prabhu Subramanian and Samir R. Das {anandps, samir@cs.sunysb.edu} Computer Science Department Stony Brook University, NY, USA

  2. Outline • Motivation – Why Directional Communication? • Deafness • Directional Hidden Terminal Problem • Antenna Model • CW-DMAC Design • Performance Evaluation • Summary

  3. Motivation - Capacity Problem in Multi-hop Wireless Networks • Wireless Multi-hop Networks – Ad hoc Networks, Mesh Networks • Data packets forwarded over multiple hops • Wireless channel is a shared medium • Capacity of multi-hop networks limited by wireless interference • Directional communication can reduce interference

  4. Directional Antenna - Basics • A Directional/Beam forming antenna has certain preferred transmit and receive directions • Steerable beam vs switched beam Omni-directional Beam

  5. Directional Antenna - Benefits • Directional Communication • Less energy in the undesired directions • Better spatial reuse • More energy in the desired direction • Longer Ranges • More robust links • Both higher spatial reuse and longer range can be simultaneously obtained

  6. F F E E B B C C A A D D Directional Communication Omni- Directional Communication Directional Communication

  7. Directional Communication - Challenges • Just adding a directional antenna is not enough • New Challenges: • Direction to transmit • Deafness • Directional Hidden Terminal Problem • Broadcasting • And more …

  8. 1 1 1 2 2 2 Deafness 4 4 4 3 3 3 B A X Deafness – Type I • Destination engaged in communication

  9. Deafness 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 B D A S Deafness – Type II • Precautionary Deafness at the Receiver

  10. Collision 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 D S A B Directional Hidden Terminal Problem - Due to unheard RTS/CTS packets

  11. Current Literature • Many proposals in the past to solve deafness • ko00infocom, choudhury02mobicom, choudhury04icnp, elbatt03wcnc, gossain04globecom, nasipuri00wcnc, sundaresan03mobihoc, takai02mobihoc • These approaches use additional resources such as additional channels, radios or busy tones • Directional hidden terminal problem not addressed

  12. Our Goal • Solve both deafness and directional hidden terminal problem using • Single Channel • Single Radio Interface

  13. Antenna Model • Switched beam antenna with N beams covering the entire 360 degrees • Two modes of operation • Omni mode • Directional Mode • Directional Gain = Omni Gain A

  14. Antenna Model • 8 phased-array antenna elements • Can form both omni-directional and directional beams • Customizable beam pattern • Beam switch time around 150 μs • Directional gain = 15dBi Commercially available Directional Antenna

  15. Antenna Model • Packet Transmission – either in omni or directional mode • Packet Reception • When Idle – omni mode • When it detects a packet, does an azimuthal scan and goes to directional mode

  16. Assumptions • Nodes are fairly static – (e.g. routers in Wireless Mesh Networks) • Each node knows the direction (beam index) to its neighbor – Simple neighbor discovery protocol • Nodes need not have an aligned axis

  17. CW-DMAC Design • Type I deafness can be solved if transmitter/receiver can inform neighbors about their impending transmission. • Type II deafness can be solved if the blocked receiver can somehow inform the transmitter that their transmission cannot take place without disturbing an ongoing transmission. • Directional hidden terminal problem can be solved if the nodes do not miss any RTS/CTS packets in the neighborhood

  18. CW-DMAC Design • RTS/CTS packets sent omni-directionally • DATA/ACK packets sent directionally • RTS/CTS packets are overloaded with the beam index of the intended DATA/ACK transmission • Neighboring nodes set their DNAV tables appropriately depending on the beam index in the RTS/CTS packets • Each neighboring node record this transmission in their neighborhood transmission table

  19. 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 A B Y X CW-DMAC Design Aware of A’s transmission

  20. 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 A D S B CW-DMAC Design • There is a possibility of collision between omni-directionally sent RTS/CTS packets and DATA/ACK packets. • We separate transmission of data packets and control packets in time • Control window – added in RTS/CTS packets • Prevents collision between data and control packets • Allows multiple simultaneous transmissions in the neighborhood in different directions

  21. CW-DMAC Design • Adjustable control window • Small control window – less parallelism • Large control window – poor channel utilization • To solve – deafness of type II • Negative CTS sent by blocked receivers • So the transmitter can cancel its transmission

  22. Performance Evaluation • Simulation – Qualnet 3.7 • 8 beam directional antenna (45 degrees) • 802.11b physical layer • 11 Mbps data rate • Comparison between CW-DMAC and DMAC • 30 nodes in an area of 1500m x 1500m

  23. Performance Evaluation - Deafness

  24. Deafness Ripple Effect

  25. Directional Hidden Terminal Problem

  26. Random Network • - 30 nodes in 1500m x 1500m • 5 simultaneous flows • Deafness and directional hidden terminal problem cause performance degradation

  27. Summary • Directional communication can reduce interference in multi-hop networks and improve capacity • Studied various scenarios in which deafness and directional hidden terminal problem could occur • Proposed a directional MAC protocol that solves both the problems using a single radio and single channel • Simulations show the improvement when the both the problems are solved

  28. Thank you Questions ???

More Related