Abstract

This paper studies the capacity of hybrid wireless networks with opportunistic routing (OR). We first extend the opportunistic routing algorithm to exploit high-speed data transmissions in infrastructure network through base stations. We then develop linear programming models to calculate the end-to-end throughput bounds from multiple source nodes to single as well as multiple destination nodes. The developed models are applied to study several hybrid wireless network examples. Through case studies, we investigate several factors that have significant impacts on the hybrid wireless network capacity under opportunistic routing, such as node transmission range, density and distribution pattern of base stations (BTs), and number of wireless channels on wireless nodes and base stations. Our numerical results demonstrate that opportunistic routing could achieve much higher throughput on both ad hoc and hybrid networks than traditional unicast routing (UR). Moreover, opportunistic routing can efficiently utilize base stations and achieve significantly higher throughput gains in hybrid wireless networks than in pure ad hoc networks especially with multiple-channel base stations.

Highlights

  • New portable devices, such as iPhone and PDAs, are increasingly equipped with strong communication and computation capabilities

  • We develop linear programming models to calculate the end-to-end throughput bounds from multiple source nodes to single as well as multiple destination nodes

  • We developed linear programming models to characterize the capacity of hybrid wireless networks with Opportunistic Routing (OR)

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Summary

Introduction

New portable devices, such as iPhone and PDAs, are increasingly equipped with strong communication and computation capabilities. Most devices have multiple radio interfaces and support different wireless protocols, such as Bluetooth, WiFi, and 3G It has become critical for such devices to efficiently utilize resources available in a hybrid wireless networking environment to achieve high data throughput and support bandwidth-intensive applications. We explore the gain of integrating OR with hybrid wireless networks that consist of ad hoc wireless nodes and base stations connected to a wireline infrastructure. (3) We demonstrate through case studies that OR can efficiently utilize BTs and achieve significantly higher throughput gains in hybrid wireless networks than in pure ad-hoc networks.

Background and Related Work
Capacity of Hybrid Wireless Networks with OR
Performance Evaluation
Findings
Conclusion

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