Abstract

Abstract Data gathering is among the issues constantly acquiring attention in the area of wireless sensor networks (WSNs). There is a consistent increase in the research directed on the gains of applying mobile elements (MEs) to collect data from sensors, especially those oriented to power issues. There are two prevailing strategies used to collect data in sensor networks. The first approach requires data packets to be serviced via multi-hop relay to reach the respective base station (BS). Thus, sensors will send their packets through other intermediate sensors. However, this strategy has proven to consume high and a substantial amount of energy due to the dependency on other nodes for transmission. The second approach encompasses a ME which serves as the core element for the searching of data. This ME will visit the transmission range of each sensor to upload its data before eventually returning to the BS to complete the data transmission. This approach has proven to reduce the energy consumption substantially as compared to the multi-hop strategy. However, it has a trade-off which is the increase of delay incurred and is constrained by the speed of ME. Furthermore, some sensors may lose their data due to overflow while waiting for the ME. In this paper, it is proposed that by strategically divisioning the area of data collection, the optimization of the ME can be elevated. These derived area divisions are focused on the determination of a common configuration range and the correlation with a redundant area within an identified area. Thus, within each of these divided areas, the multi-hop collection is deployed as a sub-set to the main collection. The ME will select a centroid point between two sub-polling points, subsequently selecting common turning points as the core of the basis of the tour path. Extensive discrete-event simulations have been developed to assess the performance of the proposed algorithm. The acquired results depicted through the performance metrics of tour length and latency have determined the superior performance of the proposed algorithm in comparison to the existing strategy. In addition, the proposed algorithm maintains the energy consumption within an acceptable level.

Highlights

  • Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) have gained substantial and critical attention over the last few years due to their impact and ability to transform many areas associated with the human life

  • We address this issue by proposing a common turning point (CTP) approach based on a polling-based approach [1]

  • Conclusions and future work In this research, a detailed description of mobile data gathering in WSNs based on turning points has been discussed

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Summary

Introduction

Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) have gained substantial and critical attention over the last few years due to their impact and ability to transform many areas associated with the human life. The authors in [20] proposed a rendezvous-based data collection In this approach, the mobile BS (i.e. the BS is not stationary) visits a sub-set of nodes (i.e. rendezvous points) and collects the data through a single hop fashion with a restricted tour length (i.e. no longer than L metre). The mobile BS (i.e. the BS is not stationary) visits a sub-set of nodes (i.e. rendezvous points) and collects the data through a single hop fashion with a restricted tour length (i.e. no longer than L metre) Despite this approach to minimizing the latency by restricting the mobile BS tour path, it suffers from power consumption due to unbounded local data gathering (i.e. unbounded relay hop).

They are mobile devices
Affiliate the corresponding sensors to geometric tree tu else
Centralized algorithm for mobile data gathering
Sort P based on the nearest neighbor concept starting from π
SPP Tour Length ViaCTP
Builds to the BS
Findings
Conclusions and future work
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