Abstract

Semantic interoperability has emerged as a key barrier amidst the major developments and challenges brought about by the rapid expansion of internet of things (IoT) applications. Establishing interoperability is essential for IoT systems to function optimally, especially across diverse organizations. Despite extensive research in achieving semantic interoperability, dynamic interoperability, a vital facet, remains inadequately addressed. This paper addresses this gap by presenting a fog-based conceptual model designed to facilitate dynamic semantic interoperability in IoT. The model incorporates a single-tier fog layer, providing the necessary processing capabilities to achieve this goal. The study conducts a comprehensive literature review on semantic interoperability, emphasizing latency, bandwidth, total cost, and energy consumption. Results demonstrate the proposed double skin façade (DSF) model’s remarkable 88% improvement in service delay over IoT-SIM and Open IoT, attributed to its efficient load-offloading mechanism and optimized fog layer, offering a 50% reduction in service delay, power consumption, and 86% reduction in network usage compared to existing approaches through data redundancy elimination via pre-processing at the fog layer.

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