Publication | Closed Access
An Efficient Algorithm for Constructing Maximum lifetime Tree for Data Gathering Without Aggregation in Wireless Sensor Networks
64
Citations
12
References
2010
Year
Unknown Venue
Cluster ComputingEngineeringWireless Sensor SystemData GatheringNetwork AnalysisSensor ConnectivityData ScienceSystematic GatheringEfficient AlgorithmInternet Of ThingsCombinatorial OptimizationEnergy ConsumptionTopology ControlComputer ScienceCollaborative Sensor NetworkEdge ComputingWireless Sensor NetworksMulti-hop RoutingEnergy-efficient Networking
Data gathering is a broad research area in wireless sensor networks. The basic operation in sensor networks is the systematic gathering and transmission of sensed data to a sink for further processing. The lifetime of the network is defined as the time until the first node depletes its energy. A key challenge in data gathering without aggregation is to conserve the energy consumption among nodes so as to maximize the network lifetime. We formalize the problem of tackling the challenge as to construct a min-max-weight spanning tree, in which the bottleneck nodes have the least number of descendants according to their energy. However, the problem is NP-complete. A ¿(log n/log/log n)-approximation algorithm MITT is proposed to solve the problem without location information. Simulation results show that MITT can achieve longer network lifetime than existing algorithms.
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