Abstract

In this paper we propose a simple relay enabled medium access (SRMAC) protocol that enables cooperative relay transmissions. Due to the wireless signal power attenuation with distance, using a relay in a wireless network can make wireless networking more bandwidth efficient at the expense of requiring multiple transmissions for a single packet. Standard MAC protocols such as the IEEE 802.11 MAC protocol, while useable with relaying, however are not designed explicitly for relay communication. When IEEE 802.11 MAC protocol is used for cooperative communication such a relaying, each packet transmission would need to separately contend for the channel via a channel access procedure which can use significant resources (both energy and bandwidth). Because using a single relay requires two transmissions, an efficient medium access control (MAC) protocol that supports two hop transmission is needed. We introduce a protocol, SRMAC, which is a simple cooperative MAC protocol that utilizes information from the physical layer for the MAC operation of relay networks. We consider the bandwidth efficiency of SRMAC protocol considering both the physical layer and MAC layer. The SRMAC protocol includes the possibility of both cooperative transmission and direct transmission. With SRMAC, cooperative transmission (relaying) can be dynamically chosen when it is more beneficial than direct transmission. The SRMAC protocol can improve the throughput by up to 20% compared to conventional MAC protocols.

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