Abstract

Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) is a very important research domain whereby civil infrastructure is monitored. Using wireless technologies can boost SHM by providing the level of autonomous operation that is essential for these tasks. Wireless routing, with its subset, geographic routing, is an important procedure that needs to be optimised, in order to lead packets to the basestation. Occasionally, routing is susceptible to interference and collisions due to a large number of connected devices. This fact led to cooperative transmission; cooperative networks are the ones that utilise relays to accomplish the transmission of packets; thus, resulting in link quality as well as throughput increase. In this paper, we investigate the Collection Tree Protocol (CTP) to show that it can be cooperative when used in an SHM for civil infrastructure monitoring applications giving a geographical essence to the routing protocol. We do that by exploiting the fact that the CTP’s mechanism uses its tree formation for a node to transmit to the best link quality parents. An example of a cooperative model to show that it may be applied to the protocol is given. Further, Indriya testbed results of direct and cooperative transmissions are given to strengthen the case of this work, with which a scenario where the CTP exhibits better link quality when using a relay is given. A practical addition is suggested, whereby an extra field in the packet struct is proposed, which will provide the CTP with further strength to changing conditions and direct communication loss.

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