Certain Investigations on Energy-Efficient Fault Detection and Recovery Management in Underwater Wireless Sensor Networks

Author(s):  
A. Prasanth

In recent years, underwater wireless sensor networks (UWSNs) have been widely applied to aquatic and military applications. Network survivability is an essential attribute to be considered in UWSN circumstance and various stratifications like node survivability, connectivity and rapid fault node detection and recovery. However, efficient and accurate fault tolerance mechanisms are required to prolong the network survivability in UWSN. In this research work, the energy-efficient fault detection and recovery management (EFRM) approach is proposed for the UWSN with relatively better network survivability. The hidden Poisson Markov model has been incorporated in EFRM to achieve efficient fault detection throughout the whole network. Thereafter, the recovered node can be selected by using the analytical network process model which facilitates to recover the larger number of nodes in the damaged region. The simulation results manifest that when the fault probability is 40%, the detection accuracy of the proposed EFRM is over 99%, and the false positive rate is below 2%. The detection accuracy is improved by up to 12% when compared with the existing state-of-the-art schemes.

Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (21) ◽  
pp. 6370
Author(s):  
Xiaohui Wei ◽  
Hao Guo ◽  
Xingwang Wang ◽  
Xiaonan Wang ◽  
Chu Wang ◽  
...  

Recently, underwater wireless sensor networks (UWSNs) have been considered as a powerful technique for many applications. However, acoustic communications in UWSNs bring in huge QoS issues for time-critical applications. Additionally, excessive control packets and multiple copies during the data transmission process exacerbate this challenge. Faced with these problems, we propose a reliable low-latency and energy-efficient transmission protocol for dense 3D underwater wireless sensor networks to improve the QoS of UWSNs. The proposed protocol exploits fewer control packets and reduces data-packet copies effectively through the co-design of routing and media access control (MAC) protocols. The co-design method is divided into two steps. First, the number of handshakes in the MAC process will be greatly reduced via our forwarding-set routing strategy under the guarantee of reliability. Second, with the help of information from the MAC process, network-update messages can be used to replace control packages through mobility prediction when choosing a route. Simulation results show that the proposed protocol has a considerably higher reliability, and lower latency and energy consumption in comparison with existing transmission protocols for a dense underwater wireless sensor network.


IEEE Access ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 39587-39604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Faheem ◽  
Rizwan Aslam Butt ◽  
Basit Raza ◽  
Hani Alquhayz ◽  
Muhammad Waqar Ashraf ◽  
...  

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