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Document Details: Topology Management for Sensor Networks:...
TITLE
 

Topology Management for Sensor Networks: Exploiting Latency and Density

In International Symposium on Mobile Ad Hoc Networking & Computing (MobiHoc'02) , vol:1 , no:1 , pp:135-145 , 11 pages , ACM Press , Lausanne, Switzerland , June 2002.

This is not a NESL document.

ABSTRACT
 

In wireless sensor networks, energy efficiency is crucial to achieve satisfactory network lifetime. In order to reduce the energy consumption of a node significantly, its radio needs to be turned off. Yet, some nodes have to participate in multi-hop packet forwarding. We tackle this issue by exploiting two degrees of freedom in topology management: the path setup latency and the network density. First, we propose a new technique called Sparse Topology and Energy Management (STEM), which aggressively puts nodes to sleep. It provides a method to wake up nodes only when they need to forward data, where latency is traded off for energy savings. Second, STEM integrates efficiently with existing approaches that leverage the fact that nearby nodes can be equivalent for traffic forwarding. In this case, an increased network density results in more energy savings. We analyze a hybrid scheme, which takes advantage of both setup latency and network density to increase the nodes' lifetime. Our results show improvements o f nearly two orders of magnitude compared to sensor networks without topology management.

AUTHORS
 

Curt Schurgers
Vlasios Tsiatsis
Saurabh Ganeriwal
Mani B Srivastava


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RELATED PROJECTS
 

PASTA : Power Aware Sensing Tracking and Analysis

TYPE
 

Conference Paper

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