Adaptive Active Period Control for Low Power Consumption and
Low Latency in Multi-hop Wireless Sensor Networks
Narumi Kai, Shiro Sakata and Nobuyoshi Komuro
Graduate School of Advanced Integration Science, Chiba University, Chiba-shi, Chiba, Japan
Keywords:
Wireless Sensor Networks, Multi-hop, IEEE 802.15.4, Energy Efficiency, Low Latency.
Abstract:
IEEE 802.15.4 beacon-enabled mode can use the superframe structure for data transmission. In using the
superframe structure, the duty cycle of the wireless personal area network defined by the values of the beacon
order (BO) and superframe order (SO) can be adjusted in order to achieve high channel utilization and low
power consumption. The optimum values of BO and SO vary according to the network condition. The
present paper proposes a novel method that achieves low power consumption and low latency in a multi-hop
wireless sensor network. In the proposed method, active periods in the superframe structure are appropriately
assigned to routing nodes according to the network topology prior to data transmission, and the values of SO
are adaptively adjusted depending on the traffic load. Simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of the
proposed method.
1 INTRODUCTION
With the rapid growth of wireless technologies and
the downsizing of devices, a number of investiga-
tions regarding wireless sensor networks (WSNs)
have been conducted in recent years. Environmen-
tal monitoring, crime prevention, disaster prevention,
home automation, and smart metering are considered
to be major applications of sensor networks.
The IEEE 802.15.4 standard defines the medium
access control (MAC) and physical layer specifica-
tions for low-rate and low-power WSNs (IEEE 802
Working Group, 2006). Zigbee (Zigbee Aliance,
2006), which is a representative WSN, adopts the
IEEE 802.15.4 standard. In IEEE 802.15.4, there
are two modes of operation: non-beacon-enabled and
beacon-enabled modes.
In the non-beacon-enabled mode, communication
is not synchronized, even if the parent-child relation
between neighboring nodes is established. In addi-
tion, the child node can start the transmission at any
time when data is to be transmitted, because the par-
ent node is always active. This, however, causes a
significant increase in power consumption.
In the beacon-enabledmode, after the parent-child
relation between neighboring nodes is established,
these nodes communicate while synchronizing with
a beacon. A child node transmits data toward a parent
node when the parent node is active. Power consump-
tion can be reduced because the parent node can sleep
in the beacon-enabled mode.
The present paper deals with IEEE 802.15.4
beacon-enabled WSNs while considering these char-
acteristics. The active period in the superframe con-
sists only of a contention access period (CAP). For
the sake of simplicity in validating the proposed
method, every contention free access period (CFP) is
neglected.
In the beacon-enabled mode, the duty cycle is de-
termined by two parameters, the beacon order (BO)
and superframe order (SO), both of which are integers
and 0 SO BO 14. When the duty cycle is small, the
power consumption is low for a low traffic load. The
end-to-end transmission delay and power consump-
tion, however, increase when the traffic is heavy, be-
cause collisions frequently occur. On the other hand,
when the duty cycle is large, collisions can be reduced
in the case of heavy traffic. Power consumption, how-
ever, increases even when the traffic load is low.
Determination of the appropriate BO and SO is
difficult because a wide variety of applications and
network topologies are assumed in WSNs. Although
a number of methods that adaptivelycontrol the active
period by adjusting BO and SO have been proposed,
fewof these methods deal with a multi-hop network in
which the congestion in the vicinity of the sink node
poses a serious problem.
The present paper proposes a novel method that
111
Kai N., Sakata S. and Komuro N..
Adaptive Active Period Control for Low Power Consumption and Low Latency in Multi-hop Wireless Sensor Networks.
DOI: 10.5220/0004228801110118
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Sensor Networks (SENSORNETS-2013), pages 111-118
ISBN: 978-989-8565-45-7
Copyright
c
2013 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)