Abstract

In this paper, a dense Internet of Things (IoT) monitoring system is studied in which a large number of devices contend for transmitting timely status packets to their corresponding receivers over wireless noisy channels, using a carrier sense multiple access (CSMA) scheme. When each device completes one transmission, due to possible transmission failure, two cases with and without transmission feedback to each device must be considered. Particularly, for the case with no feedback, the device uses policy (I): It will go to an idle state and release the channel regardless of the outcome of the transmission. For the case with perfect feedback, if the transmission succeeds, the device will go to an idle state, otherwise it uses either policy (W), i.e., it will go to a waiting state and re-contend for channel access; or it uses policy (S), i.e., it will stay at a service state and occupy this channel to attempt another transmission. For those three policies, the closed-form expressions of the average age of information (AoI) of each device are characterized under schemes with and without preemption in service. It is shown that, for each policy, the scheme with preemption in service always achieves a smaller average AoI, compared with the scheme without preemption. Then, a mean-field approximation approach with guaranteed accuracy is developed to analyze the asymptotic performance for the considered system with an infinite number of devices and the effects of the system parameters on the average AoI are characterized. Simulation results show that the proposed mean-field approximation is accurate even for a small number of devices. The results also show that olicy (S) achieves the smallest average AoI compared with policies (I) and (W), and the average AoI does not always decrease with the arrival rate for all three policies.

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