Abstract

LoRa is actually one of the most popular LPWAN technologies for IoT applications, due to its low‐power and long‐range transmissions. A single low‐cost, single‐channel LoRa Gateway is able to cover a large number of End‐Devices spread over a wide area. Gateway diversity is traditionally used to reduce the impact of packet losses: adding more Gateways can increase both delivery ratio and goodput, even when using a pure‐ALOHA access policy. However, such solution can be cost‐expensive and the adoption of control‐based medium access strategies, without violating the duty‐cycle constraints, can be, in some situations, a better option. In this letter, we compare the effectiveness of Gateway diversity against a medium access protocol with channel reservation. We evaluate if and in which scenarios, relatively to delivery ratio and goodput, in a single communication channel, it is better to add more Gateways to the system (hardware) or adopt a reservation protocol (software) for tackling the scaling‐up of the number of End‐Devices.

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