Abstract

Energy efficiency is an existing research challenge in wireless sensor networks (WSNs); to make WSNs energy efficient, many researchers moved to low-duty cycle WSNs with different data forwarding schemes. Low-duty cycle is considered to be a promising approach to design routing protocols for resource-constrained WSNs. Many applications have real-time constraints, which requires an event must be reported to the sink before deadline. Furthermore, wireless links between low-power radios are highly unreliable, and end-to-end latency requirements are challenging due to multiple transmissions for a single packet delivery. By considering probabilistic delay (i.e., delay bounded data delivery with reliability constraints) and energy efficiency issues, little research has been done using different data forwarding schemes, but still, the problem exists. In this work, two strategies are proposed for data forwarding: an energy-optimal path and a delay-optimal path. The early-arrived packet follows an optimal energy route and a diverse path to achieve a delay guarantee with minimum transmission cost. The proposed scheme improves the performance of low-duty cycle WSNs in terms of delay, reliability, stability, and transmission cost. It is observed that under different low-duty cycles, the proposed scheme achieves up to 25% energy conservation compared with both MinEEC and MinEED. At last, undirected spanning trees are considered to balance communication costs. The simulation results of the proposed scheme are compared with the existing methods.

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