Publication | Closed Access
PEAS: a robust energy conserving protocol for long-lived sensor networks
517
Citations
5
References
2003
Year
Unknown Venue
Smart SensorRobust EnergyEngineeringEmbedded SensingWireless Sensor SystemSensor ConnectivitySensor Node FailuresGreen NetworkingSensor NetworksInternet Of ThingsInexpensive SensorsComputer EngineeringMobile ComputingCollaborative Sensor NetworkSensorsEdge ComputingCloud ComputingIndustrial InformaticsEnergy-efficient Networking
Small, inexpensive sensors with limited memory, computing power, and short battery lifetimes are becoming reality, yet adverse environmental conditions and frequent node failures threaten their reliability, making long‑lived, robust sensor networks essential. This paper introduces PEAS, a protocol designed to construct long‑lived sensor networks that remain operational by leveraging large numbers of economical, short‑lived sensor nodes. PEAS extends network lifetime by keeping only a necessary subset of sensors active while putting the rest to sleep, periodically waking them to probe the environment and replace failed nodes, with self‑adjusting sleep intervals that maintain a constant wake‑up rate and adapt to high node densities.
Small, inexpensive sensors with limited memory, computing power and short battery lifetimes are turning into reality. Due to adverse conditions such as high noise levels, extreme humidity or temperatures, or even destructions from unfriendly entities, sensor node failures may become norms rather than exceptions in real environments. To be practical, sensor networks must last for much longer times than that of individual nodes, and have yet to be robust against potentially frequent node failures. This paper presents the design of PEAS, a simple protocol that can build a long-lived sensor network and maintain robust operations using large quantities of economical, short-lived sensor nodes. PEAS extends system functioning time by keeping only a necessary set of sensors working and putting the rest into sleep mode. Sleeping ones wake up now and then, probing the local environment and replacing failed ones. The sleeping periods are self-adjusted dynamically, so as to keep the sensors' wakeup rate roughly constant, thus adapting to high node densities.
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