Publication | Open Access
Opportunity-Based Topology Control in Wireless Sensor Networks
123
Citations
36
References
2009
Year
Cluster ComputingTopology ControlNetwork ScienceEngineeringEnergy EfficiencyEdge ComputingOpportunity-based Topology ControlComputer EngineeringNetwork AnalysisSystems EngineeringBerkeley Mica2 MotesInternet Of ThingsComputer ScienceSensor ConnectivityMulti-hop RoutingNetwork TopologyEnergy-efficient Networking
Topology control is an effective method to improve the energy efficiency of wireless sensor networks (WSNs). Traditional approaches are based on the assumption that a pair of nodes is either "connected" or "disconnected." These approaches are called connectivity-based topology control. In real environments, however, there are many intermittently connected wireless links called lossy links. Taking a succeeded lossy link as an advantage, we are able to construct more energy-efficient topologies. Toward this end, we propose a novel opportunity-based topology control. We show that opportunity-based topology control is a problem of NP-hard. To address this problem in a practical way, we design a fully distributed algorithm called CONREAP based on reliability theory. We prove that CONREAP has a guaranteed performance. The worst running time is O(\vert E\vert ), where E is the link set of the original topology, and the space requirement for individual nodes is O(d), where d is the node degree. To evaluate the performance of CONREAP, we design and implement a prototype system consisting of 50 Berkeley Mica2 motes. We also conducted comprehensive simulations. Experimental results show that compared with the connectivity-based topology control algorithms, CONREAP can improve the energy efficiency of a network up to six times.
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