Abstract

The large propagation delay in underwater acoustic networks results in spatial and temporal uncertainty between communication links. This uncertainty, in turn, leads to problems with spatial unfairness and packet collision in media access control (MAC) solutions. To address these issues, this research paper proposes a spatially fair and low-conflict media access control (SFLC-MAC) protocol. Within the protocol, a contention window spatial fairness adjustment strategy is designed, including random and fair states. Nodes autonomously adjust their contention states based on the perceived network information. Nodes in the fair state increase their listening time to ensure that nodes in the random state can successfully access the channel, thereby overcoming the fairness issues in channel access. A method based on postponing data packet transmission is proposed to avoid collisions between data packets and neighbors’ control packets. By scrutinizing the spatio-temporal constraints pertinent to these conflicts, the exact duration of the delay required for this method is ascertained. Simulation results demonstrate that SFLC-MAC effectively improves network throughput, reduces end-to-end delay, decreases network energy consumption, and enhances channel access fairness among nodes.

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