scholarly journals Improve Energy Consumption and Signal Transmission Quality of Routings in Wireless Sensor Networks

IEEE Access ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 198254-198264
Author(s):  
Wei-Chang Yeh ◽  
Yunzhi Jiang ◽  
Chia-Ling Huang ◽  
Neal N. Xiong ◽  
Cheng-Feng Hu ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. 155014772096804
Author(s):  
Inam Ul Haq ◽  
Qaisar Javaid ◽  
Zahid Ullah ◽  
Zafar Zaheer ◽  
Mohsin Raza ◽  
...  

Internet of things have emerged enough due to its applications in a wide range of fields such as governance, industry, healthcare, and smart environments (home, smart, cities, and so on). Internet of things–based networks connect smart devices ubiquitously. In such scenario, the role of wireless sensor networks becomes vital in order to enhance the ubiquity of the Internet of things devices with lower cost and easy deployment. The sensor nodes are limited in terms of energy storage, processing, and data storage capabilities, while their radio frequencies are very sensitive to noise and interference. These factors consequently threaten the energy consumption, lifetime, and throughput of network. One way to cope with energy consumption issue is energy harvesting techniques used in wireless sensor network–based Internet of things. However, some recent studies addressed the problems of clustering and routing in energy harvesting wireless sensor networks which either concentrate on energy efficiency or quality of service. There is a need of an adequate approach that can perform efficiently in terms of energy utilization as well as to ensure the quality of service. In this article, a novel protocol named energy-efficient multi-attribute-based clustering scheme (E2-MACH) is proposed which addresses the energy efficiency and communication reliability. It uses selection criteria of reliable cluster head based on a weighted function defined by multiple attributes such as link statistics, neighborhood density, current residual energy, and the rate of energy harvesting of nodes. The consideration of such parameters in cluster head selection helps to preserve the node’s energy and reduce its consumption by sending data over links possessing better signal-to-noise ratio and hence ensure minimum packet loss. The minimized packet loss ratio contributes toward enhanced network throughput, energy consumption, and lifetime with better service availability for Internet of things applications. A set of experiments using network simulator 2 revealed that our proposed approach outperforms the state-of-the-art low-energy adaptive clustering hierarchy and other recent protocols in terms of first-node death, overall energy consumption, and network throughput.


2014 ◽  
Vol 989-994 ◽  
pp. 4566-4569
Author(s):  
Jun Song Zhang ◽  
Bao Sun ◽  
Dong Mei Liu

This paper studies the key issues of how to reduce the energy consumption of the ZigBee nodes, through optimizing node's dormancy mechanism without affecting the quality of network communication.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shahzad Ashraf

Abstract Considering Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) in today’s scenario, sending and receiving uninterrupted sensory data remains a challenge to achieve with minimal latency and energy consumption as low as possible. Energy consumption is exponentially growing in computing devices such as computers, embedded systems, portable devices, and wireless sensor networks. Extensive research has been in practice recently to minimize energy consumption without compromising the Quality of Service (QoS) that is to provide data to the requester node with minimum Delay and high Reliability. This article analyzes the Synergic development of energy efficacious wireless sensor networks (SDEE) which aims to reduce energy demand by reducing the overhead packet in the network and also provides the requester with a minimum delay by collecting data requests from the next cache node in the vicinity of the requester or sink node. The findings of the simulation clearly show that energy usage is lower when the empirical grid model is used against the star / cluster model when the parameters are the same.


Author(s):  
V. Balaji ◽  
A. Ravi Kumar

In recent years, there has been a winged generation of research relating to wireless sensor networks (WSN), due to large-scale range of potential utilization there can be used for several applications such as, surveillance, hostile monitoring, target tracking, and security management. Sensor nodes can be defined as typically powered by batteries so it is having a limited amount of lifetime, and another problem can be considering is batteries cannot be recharged. The energy problem is extreme difficulty in wireless sensor networks. So we proposed advanced routing protocol PDORP, reduced the energy consumption as well as improving the quality of service (QoS), and better throughput which compared to another routing such as, LEACH, PEGASIS, DSR, and OLSR.


2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 188-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josip Balen ◽  
Drago Zagar ◽  
Cesar Viho ◽  
Goran Martinovic

Author(s):  
Omkar Singh ◽  
Vinay Rishiwal

Background & Objective: Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) consist of huge number of tiny senor nodes. WSN collects environmental data and sends to the base station through multi-hop wireless communication. QoS is the salient aspect in wireless sensor networks that satisfies end-to-end QoS requirement on different parameters such as energy, network lifetime, packets delivery ratio and delay. Among them Energy consumption is the most important and challenging factor in WSN, since the senor nodes are made by battery reserved that tends towards life time of sensor networks. Methods: In this work an Improve-Energy Aware Multi-hop Multi-path Hierarchy (I-EAMMH) QoS based routing approach has been proposed and evaluated that reduces energy consumption and delivers data packets within time by selecting optimum cost path among discovered routes which extends network life time. Results and Conclusion: Simulation has been done in MATLAB on varying number of rounds 400- 2000 to checked the performance of proposed approach. I-EAMMH is compared with existing routing protocols namely EAMMH and LEACH and performs better in terms of end-to-end-delay, packet delivery ratio, as well as reduces the energy consumption 13%-19% and prolongs network lifetime 9%- 14%.


Author(s):  
Chinedu Duru ◽  
Neco Ventura ◽  
Mqhele Dlodlo

Background: Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) have been researched to be one of the ground-breaking technologies for the remote monitoring of pipeline infrastructure of the Oil and Gas industry. Research have also shown that the preferred deployment approach of the sensor network on pipeline structures follows a linear array of nodes, placed a distance apart from each other across the infrastructure length. The linear array topology of the sensor nodes gives rise to the name Linear Wireless Sensor Networks (LWSNs) which over the years have seen themselves being applied to pipelines for effective remote monitoring and surveillance. This paper aims to investigate the energy consumption issue associated with LWSNs deployed in cluster-based fashion along a pipeline infrastructure. Methods: Through quantitative analysis, the study attempts to approach the investigation conceptually focusing on mathematical analysis of proposed models to bring about conjectures on energy consumption performance. Results: From the derived analysis, results have shown that energy consumption is diminished to a minimum if there is a sink for every placed sensor node in the LWSN. To be precise, the analysis conceptually demonstrate that groups containing small number of nodes with a corresponding sink node is the approach to follow when pursuing a cluster-based LWSN for pipeline monitoring applications. Conclusion: From the results, it is discovered that energy consumption of a deployed LWSN can be decreased by creating groups out of the total deployed nodes with a sink servicing each group. In essence, the smaller number of nodes each group contains with a corresponding sink, the less energy consumed in total for the entire LWSN. This therefore means that a sink for every individual node will attribute to minimum energy consumption for every non-sink node. From the study, it can be concurred that energy consumption of a LWSN is inversely proportional to the number of sinks deployed and hence the number of groups created.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document