Abstract

Industrial cognitive radio sensor networks (ICRSNs) extend channel resources by occupying the vacant licensed channels in the absence of licensed users. In ICRSNs, industrial devices should switch to a common available channel to set up a communication link. However, channel switching leads to severe energy consumption. As the energy resources of battery-powered industrial devices are limited, it is crucial to carefully allocate channels to prolong the network lifetime of multi-hop ICRSNs. This paper is the first work that studies the channel allocation problem to optimize the network lifetime by considering the channel-switching (CS) energy consumption and the time-critical requirements of industrial applications. The problem is formulated to maximize the minimum residual energy at each round of data transmission, which is linearized as integer linear programming. As the channel allocation results will affect the residual energy at subsequent rounds, we propose a switching distance-optimized channel allocation (SDOCA) scheme that shortens the CS distances to improve the residual energy of each device. Moreover, we analyze the characteristics of SDOCA, i.e., convergent CS distance and guaranteed end-to-end delay. Extensive simulation results show that SDOCA can adaptively allocate channels according to the end-to-end delay requirement and significantly prolong the network lifetime.

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