Abstract

Under a dense and large IoT network, a star topology where each device is directly connected to the Internet gateway may cause serious waste of energy and congestion issues. Grouping network devices into clusters provides a suitable architecture to reduce the energy consumption and allows an effective management of communication channels. Although several clustering approaches were proposed in the literature, most of them use the single-hop intra-clustering model. In a large network, the number of clusters increases and the energy draining remains almost the same as in un-clustered architecture. To solve the problem, several approaches use the k-hop intra-clustering to generate a reduced number of large clusters. However, k-hop proposed schemes are, generally, centralized and only assume the node direct neighbors information which lack of robustness. In this regard, the present work proposes a distributed approach for the k-hop intra-clustering called Distributed Clustering based 2-Hop Connectivity (DC2HC). The algorithm uses the two-hop neighbors connectivity to elect the appropriate set of cluster heads and strengthen the clusters connectivity. The objective is to optimize the set of representative cluster heads to minimize the number of long range communication channels and expand the network lifetime. The paper provides the convergence proof of the proposed solution. Simulation results show that our proposed protocol outperforms similar approaches available in the literature by reducing the number of generated cluster heads and achieving longer network lifetime.

Highlights

  • IoT networks cover progressively more aspects of our daily life and represent a convergence field of multiple technologies

  • Long distance communication channels used by cluster heads to reach the base station consume a significant amount of energy and accelerate the appearance of dead nodes and congestion problems

  • We present a new distributed approach for k-hop intra-clustering called Distributed Clustering based 2-Hop Connectivity (DC2HC) for large networks

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Summary

Introduction

IoT networks cover progressively more aspects of our daily life and represent a convergence field of multiple technologies. IoT has rapidly spread to various fields of interest, i.e., smart healthcare, smart city, smart home, intelligent transportation systems and many other applications [2]. Such systems could be seen as a large number of heterogeneous devices that need to access and be accessible from the Internet [3]. Energy efficiency is a basic concept that should be incorporated into the overall networks infrastructure [6]

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