Abstract

While many approaches have been proposed to deal with energy/latency trade-offs, they are likely to be insufficient for the applications where reduced delay guarantee is the main concern. In this article, we investigated the potential application of a decentralized two-tiered network architecture, in large-scale wireless sensor networks, where an upper layer Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN), offering more powerful capabilities, serves as a backbone to an adaptively-clustered Low-Energy Adaptive Clustering Hierarch (LEACH)-based wireless sensor network. The WLAN layer will be involved in the communication between the sensor network and the control station, mitigating the impact of the limited capacities of the sensor nodes. With this two-tiered architecture we target to provide more reliable data delivery with reduced delay bounds, and lower energy consumption in the underlying sensor network, thereby increasing its lifetime. Simulation results show that the two-tiered network architecture achieved a relatively long lifetime, while preserving remarkably low latencies, compared to a single-tiered LEACH and a super-clustered LEACH-based network architectures.

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