Abstract
Power use is a crucial design concern in wireless ad hoc and sensor networks since it corresponds directly to the network operational time. In this paper, we study the issue of power-efficient use in the following two aspects: Selecting power-efficient routes and performing efficient localized topology control to assign reduced transmit powers at nodes while preserving the global optimal connectivity. We proposed a localized topology control algorithm using two-hop neighborhood knowledge, which works to build local shortest path tree at each node independently in order to generate a reduced topology while preserving the global optimal connectivity. We derive the energy stretch ratio and maximum degree performance of our proposed algorithm as well as several existing algorithms in this aspect. We then devise three power-efficient on-demand routing protocols on top of various localized topology control algorithms, which are to acquire minimum-power paths while minimizing the associated protocol overhead for route discovery by utilizing local network state information and also packet receipt status at neighbor nodes. We further derive the asymptotical performance of the routing strategy in our protocols in terms of energy stretch ratio and route acquisition latency when network nodes operate at limited discrete power levels. Simulation results are provided to demonstrate the high performance of our topology control algorithm and also the devised routing protocols.
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