Abstract

In underwater wireless sensor networks, stability and reliability of the network are of paramount importance. Stability of the network ensures persistent operation of the network that, in consequence, avoids data loss when nodes consume all the battery power and subject to death. Particularly, nodes bearing a low pressure of water die early in the usual routing approach due to being preferred choices for data routing. Reliability ensures minimization of the adverse channel effects on data packets so that the desired information is easily extracted from these packets. This article proposes two routing protocols for underwater wireless sensor networks: reliable and stability-aware routing and cooperative reliable and stability-aware routing. In reliable and stability-aware routing, energy assignment to a node is made on the basis of its depth. Sensor nodes having the lowest depth are assigned the highest amount of energy. This energy assignment is called the energy grade of a node and five energy grades are formed in the proposed network from top to bottom. The energy grade along with energy residing in a node battery and its depth decide its selection as a forwarder node. The reliable and stability-aware routing uses only a single link to forward packets. Such a link may not be reliable always. To overcome this issue, the cooperative reliable and stability-aware routing is proposed which introduces cooperative routing to reliable and stability-aware routing. Cooperative routing involves the reception of multiple copies of data symbols by destination. This minimizes the adverse channel effects on data packets and makes the information extraction convenient and less cumbersome at the final destination. Unlike the conventional approach, the proposed schemes do not take into account the coordinates of nodes for defining the routing trajectories, which is challenging in underwater medium. Simulation results reveal a better behavior of the proposed protocols than some competitive schemes in terms of providing stability to the network, packet transfer to the ultimate destination, and latency.

Highlights

  • Reliable communications and stability of the network are the most vital challenges in the underwater wireless sensor networks (UWSNs)

  • Packet delivery in reliable and stability-aware routing (RSAR) over a single link does not guarantee reliability in transferring packets to the sink at the water surface. It is because channel effects on a single link may change due to the harshness of the underwater channel. This is overcome by adding cooperative routing to RSAR that leads to the development of the cooperative reliable and stability-aware routing (CoRSAR) protocol

  • At the 5000th round, there are 185 nodes alive in the proposed cooperative scheme, while 161 nodes are alive in cooperative depth-based routing (CoDBR) which is less than that in CoRSAR

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Reliable communications and stability of the network are the most vital challenges in the underwater wireless sensor networks (UWSNs). Nodes with the lowest depth are always selected for data routing, which creates data burden on the nodes near the water surface and makes the nodes die quickly. This reduces the stability of the network. The motivation for making these energy grades and assignment of high initial energy to the nodes is that the nodes having the lowest depth have the highest data traffic on them and die quickly. It is because channel effects on a single link may change due to the harshness of the underwater channel This is overcome by adding cooperative routing to RSAR that leads to the development of the CoRSAR protocol. The proposed protocols are free of node localization, which requires extra computation

Literature review
Declaration of conflicting interests
Conclusion and future work
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call