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Book Capacity Analysis and Cross layer Protocol Design in Wireless Networks

Download or read book Capacity Analysis and Cross layer Protocol Design in Wireless Networks written by Pan Li and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Then, we design a MAC protocol for mobile ad hoc networks using directional antennas along with some further improvements. Besides, we also propose a coupled MAC and routing cross-layer design for ad hoc networks with power control. Furthermore, we look into the use of multiple channels in wireless mesh networks by carrying out real experiments on our testbeds, and provide some guidelines for using multi-channel in WMNs.

Book Wireless Networks  Multiuser Detection in Cross Layer Design

Download or read book Wireless Networks Multiuser Detection in Cross Layer Design written by Christina Comaniciu and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2006-06-14 with total page 214 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Cross-layer design seeks to enhance the capacity of wireless networks significantly through the joint optimization of multiple layers in the network, primarily the physical (PHY) and medium access control (MAC) layers. Although there are advantages of such design in wireline networks as well, this approach is particularly advantageous for wireless networks due to the properties (such as mobility and interference) that strongly affect performance and design of higher layer protocols. This unique monograph is concerned with the issue of cross-layer design in wireless networks, and more particularly with the impact of node-level multiuser detection on such design. It provides an introduction to this vibrant and active research area insufficiently covered in existing literature, presenting some of the principal methods developed and results obtained to date. Accompanied by numerous illustrations, the text is an excellent reference for engineers, researchers and students working in communication networks.

Book Resource Allocation and Cross layer Control in Wireless Networks

Download or read book Resource Allocation and Cross layer Control in Wireless Networks written by Leonidas Georgiadis and published by Now Publishers Inc. This book was released on 2006 with total page 161 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Information flow in a telecommunication network is accomplished through the interaction of mechanisms at various design layers with the end goal of supporting the information exchange needs of the applications. In wireless networks in particular, the different layers interact in a nontrivial manner in order to support information transfer. In this text we will present abstract models that capture the cross-layer interaction from the physical to transport layer in wireless network architectures including cellular, ad-hoc and sensor networks as well as hybrid wireless-wireline. The model allows for arbitrary network topologies as well as traffic forwarding modes, including datagrams and virtual circuits. Furthermore the time varying nature of a wireless network, due either to fading channels or to changing connectivity due to mobility, is adequately captured in our model to allow for state dependent network control policies. Quantitative performance measures that capture the quality of service requirements in these systems depending on the supported applications are discussed, including throughput maximization, energy consumption minimization, rate utility function maximization as well as general performance functionals. Cross-layer control algorithms with optimal or suboptimal performance with respect to the above measures are presented and analyzed. A detailed exposition of the related analysis and design techniques is provided.

Book Cross Layer Design and Analysis of Wireless Networks

Download or read book Cross Layer Design and Analysis of Wireless Networks written by and published by . This book was released on 2004 with total page 52 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: We have shown certain invariants (optimum distance, optimum error probability); by considering a couple layers joint design/optimization and analysis is possible; insight into performance analysis can be obtained; still need to consider many other factors (power control, data rate control, multiple access capability of modulation and coding); there are many open and interesting problems in cross-layer design.

Book Protocol Design and Analysis for Cooperative Wireless Networks

Download or read book Protocol Design and Analysis for Cooperative Wireless Networks written by Wei Song and published by Springer. This book was released on 2016-11-03 with total page 135 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book focuses on the design and analysis of protocols for cooperative wireless networks, especially at the medium access control (MAC) layer and for crosslayer design between the MAC layer and the physical layer. It highlights two main points that are often neglected in other books: energy-efficiency and spatial random distribution of wireless devices. Effective methods in stochastic geometry for the design and analysis of wireless networks are also explored. After providing a comprehensive review of existing studies in the literature, the authors point out the challenges that are worth further investigation. Then, they introduce several novel solutions for cooperative wireless network protocols that reduce energy consumption and address spatial random distribution of wireless nodes. For each solution, the book offers a clear system model and problem formulation, details of the proposed cooperative schemes, comprehensive performance analysis, and extensive numerical and simulation results that validate the analysis and examine the performance under various conditions. The last section of this book reveals several potential directions for the research on cooperative wireless networks that deserve future exploration. Researchers, professionals, engineers, and consultants in wireless communication and mobile networks will find this book valuable. It is also helpful for technical staff in mobile network operations, wireless equipment manufacturers, wireless communication standardization bodies, and governmental regulation agencies.

Book Wireless Networks  Multiuser Detection in Cross Layer Design

Download or read book Wireless Networks Multiuser Detection in Cross Layer Design written by Christina Comaniciu and published by Springer. This book was released on 2008-11-01 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Cross-layer design seeks to enhance the capacity of wireless networks significantly through the joint optimization of multiple layers in the network, primarily the physical (PHY) and medium access control (MAC) layers. Although there are advantages of such design in wireline networks as well, this approach is particularly advantageous for wireless networks due to the properties (such as mobility and interference) that strongly affect performance and design of higher layer protocols. This unique monograph is concerned with the issue of cross-layer design in wireless networks, and more particularly with the impact of node-level multiuser detection on such design. It provides an introduction to this vibrant and active research area insufficiently covered in existing literature, presenting some of the principal methods developed and results obtained to date. Accompanied by numerous illustrations, the text is an excellent reference for engineers, researchers and students working in communication networks.

Book Capacity and Cross layer Design of Wireless Ad Hoc Networks

Download or read book Capacity and Cross layer Design of Wireless Ad Hoc Networks written by Stavros Toumpis and published by . This book was released on 2003 with total page 119 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Adaptation and Cross Layer Design in Wireless Networks

Download or read book Adaptation and Cross Layer Design in Wireless Networks written by Mohamed Ibnkahla and published by CRC Press. This book was released on 2018-10-08 with total page 444 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Adaptive techniques play a key role in modern wireless communication systems. The concept of adaptation is emphasized in the Adaptation in Wireless Communications Series through a unified framework across all layers of the wireless protocol stack ranging from the physical layer to the application layer, and from cellular systems to next-generation wireless networks. Adaptation and Cross Layer Design in Wireless Networks is devoted to adaptation in the data link layer, network layer, and application layer. The book presents state-of-the-art adaptation techniques and methodologies, including cross-layer adaptation, joint signal processing, coding and networking, selfishness in mobile ad hoc networks, cooperative and opportunistic protocols, adaptation techniques for multimedia support, self –organizing routing, and tunable security services. It presents several new theoretical paradigms and analytical findings which are supported with various simulation and experimental results. Adaptation in wireless communications is needed in order to achieve high capacity and ubiquitous communications. The current trend in wireless communication systems is to make adaptation dependent upon the state of the relevant parameters in all layers of the system. Focusing on simplified cross layer design approaches, this volume describes advanced techniques such as adaptive resource management, adaptive modulation and coding, 4G communications, QoS, diversity combining, and energy and mobility aware MAC protocols. The first volume in the series, Adaptive Signal Processing in Wireless Communications (cat no.46012) covers adaptive signal processing at the physical layer.

Book Capacity and Cross Layer Design of Ultra Wide Wireless Networks

Download or read book Capacity and Cross Layer Design of Ultra Wide Wireless Networks written by Arjunan Rajeswaran and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Using Cross Layer Techniques for Communication Systems

Download or read book Using Cross Layer Techniques for Communication Systems written by Rashvand, Habib F. and published by IGI Global. This book was released on 2012-04-30 with total page 656 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Although the existing layering infrastructure--used globally for designing computers, data networks, and intelligent distributed systems and which connects various local and global communication services--is conceptually correct and pedagogically elegant, it is now well over 30 years old has started create a serious bottleneck. Using Cross-Layer Techniques for Communication Systems: Techniques and Applications explores how cross-layer methods provide ways to escape from the current communications model and overcome the challenges imposed by restrictive boundaries between layers. Written exclusively by well-established researchers, experts, and professional engineers, the book will present basic concepts, address different approaches for solving the cross-layer problem, investigate recent developments in cross-layer problems and solutions, and present the latest applications of the cross-layer in a variety of systems and networks.

Book Random Access for Wireless Networks

Download or read book Random Access for Wireless Networks written by Mubashir I. Syed and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Cross layer Operation Aided Wireless Networks

Download or read book Cross layer Operation Aided Wireless Networks written by Hong Chen and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In this thesis, we propose several cross-layer operation aided schemes conceived for wireless networks. Cross layer design may overcome the disadvantages of the network's layered architecture, where layering is most typically represented by the Transport Control Protocol (TCP) / Internet Protocol (IP) suite. We invoke Fountain codes for protecting file transfer at the application layer, since they are suitable for erasure channels. They are also often referred to as rateless codes. When implementing Fountain code aided file transfer, the file will be firstly partitioned into a number of blocks, each of which contains K packets. Fountain codes randomly select several packets from a block and then combine them using exclusive- OR additions for generating an encoded packet. The encoding continues until all blocks are successfully received. Considering an 802.11 Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) scenario, the packet size has to be appropriately chosen, since there exists a trade-off between the packet size and the transmission efficiency, which is defined as the number of primary information bits to the total number of all transmitted bits including headers, control packets and retransmitted replicas. In order to find the optimum packet size, the transmission efficiency is formulated as a function of the Packet Loss Ratio (PLR) at the application layer and of the total load imposed by a single packet. The PLR at the application layer is related both to the packet size, as well as to the 802.11 MAC retransmission mechanism and to the modulation scheme adopted by the physical layer. Apart from its source data, the total load imposed by an information packet also contains the control packets of the 802.11 Media Access Control (MAC) protocol such as the Request To Send (RTS) / Clear To Send (CTS) messages, the retransmitted replicas and the Acknowledgement (ACK) messages. According to these relations, the transmission effciency may finally be expressed as a function of packet size. Based on the numerical analysis of this function, the optimum packet size may be determined. Our simulation results confirmed that indeed the highest transmission efficiency may be achieved, when using the optimum packet size. Since turbo codes are capable of achieving near capacity performance, they may be successfully combined with Hybrid Automatic Repeat reQuest (HARQ) schemes. In this thesis, the classic Twin Component Turbo Codes (TCTCs) are extended to Multiple Component Turbo Codes (MCTCs). In order to apply classic two-dimensional Extrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) charts for analyzing them, we divided an N-component MCTC into two logical parts. This partitioning was necessary, because otherwise an N-component scheme would require an N-dimensional EXIT chart. One of the parts is constituted by an individual Bahl, Cocke, Jelinek and Raviv (BCJR) decoder, while the other so-called composite decoder consists of the remaining (N-1) components. The EXIT charts visualized the extrinsic information exchange between these two logical parts of MCTCs. Aided by this partitioning technique, we may find the so-called `open tunnel SNR threshold' for MCTCs, which is defined as the minimum SNR for which the EXIT chart at the specific coding rate used has an open tunnel. It may be used as a metric to compare the achievable performance to the Discreteinput Continuous-output Memoryless Channel's (DCMC) capacity. Our simulation results showed that the achievable performance of MCTCs is closer to the DCMC capacity than that of non-systematic TCTCs, but a bit further than that of systematic TCTCs, if generator polynomials having an arbitrary memory length - and hence complexity - are considered. However, for the lowest-memory octally represented polynomial (2; 3)o, which implies having the lowest possible complexity, MCTCs outperform non-systematic and systematic TCTCs. Furthermore, MCTC aided HARQ schemes using the polynomial of (2; 3)o exhibit significantly better PLRs and throughput performances than systematic as well as non-systematic TCTC aided HARQ schemes using the same polynomial. If systematic TCTC aided HARQ schemes relying on the polynomial of (17; 15)o are used as benchmarkers, MCTC aided HARQ schemes may significantly reduce the complexity, without a substantial degradation of the PLR and throughput. When combining turbo codes with HARQ, the associated complexity becomes a critical issue, since iterative decoding is immediately activated after each transmission. In order to reduce the associated complexity, an Early Stopping (ES) strategy was proposed in this thesis to substitute the fixed number of BCJR operations invoked for each iterative decoding. By observing the EXIT charts of turbo codes, we note that the extrinsic information increases along the decoding trajectory of an open or closed tunnel. The ES aided MCTC HARQ scheme curtails iterative decoding, when the Mutual Information (MI) increase becomes less than a given threshold. This threshold was determined by an off-line training in order to achieve a trade-off between the throughput and complexity. Our simulation results verified that the complexity of MCTC aided HARQ schemes may be reduced by as much as 80%, compared to that of systematic TCTC aided HARQ schemes using a fixed number of 10 BCJR operations. Moreover, the complexity of turbo coded HARQ schemes may be further reduced by our Look-Up Table (LUT) based Deferred Iteration (DI) method. The DI method delays the iterative decoding until the receiver estimates that it has received sufficient information for successful decoding, which may be represented by the emergence of an open tunnel in the EXIT chart corresponding to all received replicas. Therefore, the specific MI that a `just' open tunnel appears when combining all previous (i-1) MIs will be the threshold that has to be satisfed by the ith reception. More specifically, if the MI received during the ith reception is higher than this threshold, the EXIT tunnel is deemed to be open and hence the iterative decoding is triggered. Otherwise, iterative decoding will be disabled when the tunnel is deemed to be closed. This reduces the complexity. The LUT stores all possible MI thresholds for N-component MCTCs, which results in a large storage requirement, if N becomes high. Hence, an efficient LUT design was also proposed in this thesis. Our simulation results demonstrated the achievable complexity reduction may be as high as 50%, compared to the schemes operating without the DI method.

Book Cross layer Protocol Design and Performance Study for Wideband Wireless Networks

Download or read book Cross layer Protocol Design and Performance Study for Wideband Wireless Networks written by and published by . This book was released on 2001 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis presents a cross-layer design and optimization for emerging wideband wireless networks supporting multimedia applications, considering the interactions of the wireless channel characteristics, the physical and link layer protocols, and the user-perceived Quality-of-Service (QoS). As wireless channels are error-prone and broadcast in nature, both the error control mechanisms and the Media Access Control (MAC) protocols are critical for resource utilization and QoS provisioning. How to analyze, design and optimize the high-rate wireless networks by considering the characteristics of the propagation channels and wideband communication technologies is an open, challenging issue. In this thesis, we consider two important wideband wireless systems, the Ultra-Wideband (UWB) and the Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing (OFDM) systems. First, we propose the packet-level channel models based on Finite State Markov Chains (FSMCs) for the two systems, which present the statistical properties of the propagation channels and the transmission systems. Second, by incorporating the proposed packet-level channel models, we develop analytical frameworks for quantifying the performance of the high-rate wireless networks, combining the channel fading, physical- and link-layer error-control mechanisms and MAC protocols. Third, to mitigate the impact of channel fading and impairments, a cross-layer joint error-control mechanism is proposed. In addition, we also investigate the impact of channel fading on the video streaming applications, and propose a simple admission control algorithm to ensure QoS. As considering the physical-layer characteristics is critical for ensuring QoS and efficiency of resource utilization, the packet-level channel models, cross-layer analytical frameworks, networking protocols and simulation methodologies proposed in this dissertation are essential for future proliferation of high-rate wireless networks.

Book Cross layer Design and Analysis for Wireless Networks

Download or read book Cross layer Design and Analysis for Wireless Networks written by Long Bao Le and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 165 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Cross layer Design of Wireless Networks

Download or read book Cross layer Design of Wireless Networks written by Vishwanath Ramamurthi and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page 380 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Wireless Mesh Networks

Download or read book Wireless Mesh Networks written by Ekram Hossain and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2007-11-20 with total page 351 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book collects articles featuring recent advances in the theory and applications of wireless mesh networking technology. The contributed articles, from the leading experts in the field, cover both theoretical concepts and system-level implementation issues. The book starts with the essential background on the basic concepts and architectures of wireless mesh networking and then presents advanced level materials in a step-by-step fashion.

Book Cross Layer Design for Energy Conservation and Capacity Improvement Over Mobile Ad Hoc Networks

Download or read book Cross Layer Design for Energy Conservation and Capacity Improvement Over Mobile Ad Hoc Networks written by and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 166 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The layered architecture based on OSI model has been widely used in wired networks. Due to the dynamics of wireless medium and the node mobility, many special problems appear in wireless networks, which prevent the conventional layered architecture from functioning optimally in wireless environment. In this thesis, we study the wireless networks from different perspectives. Our objective is to systematically develop network protocols and architecture to address various limitations of wireless systems by assuming a cross-layer approach. Firstly, we develop an energy consumption model for wireless ad hoc networks. In existing work, transmission power is commonly used to represent energy consumption cost. In this study, we analyze possible energy consumptions in physical layer, MAC layer (such as signaling packets), and upper layers (such as end-to-end retransmission), and propose more accurate models to capture the energy consumption cost due to different factors. Secondly, based on the energy consumption model, we design an energy efficient routing protocol. The existing energy efficient routing protocols only focus on the search of the most energy efficient path. However, there are many problems in these protocols, including broadcast storm issue, long setup delay, and poor performance in mobility scenario. In this study, we propose an efficient method for estimating the accurate link cost, a quick path searching scheme to find the energy efficient path, and an efficient maintenance scheme to adjust the path according to the environment. Thirdly, we perform the cross-layer design for multiple-channel multiple-interface network to improve the throughput. Current MAC and routing protocols are mainly developed for only one channel and the existing wireless devices are equipped with only one wireless interface. In this study, we design a unified MAC and routing framework to exploit the benefits enabled by the multiple channels to improve the capacity of ad hoc networks. Our joint channel assignment and routing scheme searches for an efficient transmission path, while taking into account the limited number of channels/interfaces, local topology information, and link rate diversity. Our scheduling scheme at MAC layer coordinates transmissions within the vicinity over a short time scale to maximize channel usage and avoid collision among nodes sharing the same channel. The scheduling scheme complemented with prioritized transmitting will also coordinate interface switching to avoid unnecessary switching delay, support load balancing, reduce the broadcast delay and further improve throughput in a multi-channel multi-interface environment.