Title: Capacity of Ad Hoc Networks
1Capacity of Ad Hoc Networks
2The Attenuation Model
- Path loss
- Ratio of received power to transmitted power
- Function of medium properties and propagation
distance - If PR is received power, PT is the transmitted
power, and d is distance - Where ? ranges from 2 to 4
3Interference Models
- In addition to path loss, bit-error rate of a
received transmission depends on - Noise power
- Transmission powers and distances of other
transmitters in the receivers vicinity - Two models GK00
- Physical model
- Protocol model
4The Physical Model
- Let Xi denote set of nodes that are
simultaneously transmitting - Let Pi be the transmission power of node Xi
- Transmission of Xi is successfully received by Y
if - Where ? is the min signal-interference ratio
(SIR)
5The Protocol Model
- Transmission of Xi is successfully received by Y
if for all k - where ? is a protocol-specified guard-zone to
prevent interference
6Measures for Network Capacity
- Throughput capacity GK00
- Number of successful packets delivered per second
- Dependent on the traffic pattern
- What is the maximum achievable, over all
protocols, for a random node distribution and a
random destination for each source? - Transport capacity GK00
- Network transports one bit-meter when one bit has
been transported a distance of one meter - Number of bit-meters transported per second
- What is the maximum achievable, over all node
locations, and all traffic patterns, and all
protocols?
7Transport Capacity Assumptions
- n nodes are arbitrarily located in a unit disk
- We adopt the protocol model
- Each node transmits with same power
- Condition for successful transmission from Xi to
Y for any k - Transmissions are in synchronized slots
8Transport Capacity Lower Bound
- What configuration and traffic pattern will yield
the highest transport capacity? - Distribute n/2 senders uniformly in the unit disk
- Place n/2 receivers just close enough to senders
so as to satisfy threshold
9Transport Capacity Lower Bound
10Transport Capacity Lower Bound
- Sender-receiver distance is
- Assuming channel bandwidth W, transport capacity
is - Thus, transport capacity per node is
11Transport Capacity Upper Bound
- For any slot, we will upper bound the total
bit-meters transported - For a receiver j, let r_j denote the distance
from its sender - If channel capacity is W, then bit-meters
transported per second is
12Transport Capacity Upper Bound
- Consider two successful transmissions in a slot
13Transport Capacity Upper Bound
- Balls of radii around , for all , are
disjoint - So bit-meters transported per slot is
14Throughput Capacity of Random Networks
- The throughput capacity of an -node random
network is - There exist constants c and c such that
15Implications of Analysis
- Transport capacity
- Per node transport capacity decreases as
- Maximized when nodes transmit to neighbors
- Throughput capacity
- For random networks, decreases as
- Near-optimal when nodes transmit to neighbors
- Designers should focus on small networks and/or
local communication
16Remarks on Capacity Analysis
- Similar claims hold in the physical model as well
- Results are unchanged even if the channel can be
broken into sub-channels - More general analysis
- Power law traffic patterns LBD03
- Hybrid networks KT03, LLT03, Tou04
- Asymmetric scenarios and cluster networks Tou04
17Asymmetric Traffic Scenarios
- Number of destinations smaller than number of
sources - nd destinations for n sources 0 lt d lt 1
- Each source picks a random destination
- If 0 lt d lt 1/2, capacity scales as nd
- If 1/2 lt d lt 1, capacity scales as n1/2
- Tou04
18Power Law Traffic Pattern
- Probability that a node communicates with a node
x units away is - For large negative , destinations clustered
around sender - For large positive , destinations clustered at
periphery - As goes from lt -2 to gt -1, capacity scaling
goes from to LBD03
19Relay Nodes
- Offer improved capacity
- Better spatial reuse
- Relay nodes do not count in
- Expensive addition of nodes as pure relays
yields less than -fold increase - Hybrid networks n wireless nodes and nd access
points connected by a wired network - 0 lt d lt 1/2 No asymptotic benefit
- 1/2 lt d lt 1 Capacity scaling by a factor of nd
20Mobility and Capacity
- A set of nodes communicating in random
source-destination pairs - Expected number of hops is
- Necessary scaling down of capacity
- Suppose no tight delay constraint
- Strategy packet exchanged when source and
destination are near each other - Fraction of time two nodes are near one another
is - Refined strategy Pick random relay node (a la
Valiant) as intermediate destination GT01 - Constant scaling assuming that stationary
distribution of node location is uniform