Title: IEEE 802.11 Ad Hoc Mode: Measurement studies
1IEEE 802.11 Ad Hoc Mode Measurement studies
Marco Conti Computer Networks Dept., IIT
CNR Marco.conti_at_iit.cnr.it http//cnd.iit.cnr.it/m
obileMAN
2MobileMAN Enabling Technologies
- Reference technology IEEE 802.11b (Wi-Fi)
- Develop an enhancement wireless multiple access
layer starting from existing wireless
technologies - Design and prototype a new MAC card
- minimal change modification only to MAC (not to
physical layer) - compatibility with original 802.11
3IEEE 802.11 Simulative Studies
Simulative studies are highly dependent on the
802.11 channel model
Measurements studies are required
- Measurements of IEEE 802.11 in Ad Hoc
configurations - Understanding of important phenomena in ad hoc
configuration - Channel model
- Tuning of simulative experiments
4IEEE 802.11 behavior
The Transmission Range (TX_Range) represents the
range (with respect to the transmitting station)
within which a transmitted packet can be
successfully received. The Physical Carrier
Sensing Range (PCS_Range) is the range (with
respect to the transmitting station) within which
the other stations detect a busy
channel. Interference Range (IF_Range) is the
range within which stations in receive mode will
be interfered with by a transmitter, and thus
suffer a loss.
5IEEE 802.11 behavior Simulative Studies
The following relationship exists between the
ranges TX_Range lt IF_Range ltPCS_Range
6Experimental Environment
- Hardware
- Wireless D-LinkAir DWL-650 card
- ( IEEE 802.11b )
- Laptops (41)
- Software
- Operative System Linux Mandrake 8.2
- Software for the traffic generation DBS
- Software to trace MAC PDU Snuffle
- Physical Environment
- Open-space areas near CNR in Pisa.
7802.11b Throughput
8Measurements of the Transmission Range
9Transmission Range TXDATA and TXCONTROL
IEEE 802.11b
10Impact of Ground on TX
The transmission ranges depend on the devices
height from the ground
The experiments were performed with the Wi-Fi
card set at two different transmission rates 2
and 11 Mbps. In each set of experiments the
distance among the two devices was set close to
guarantee that the receiver is always inside the
sender transmission range. Specifically, the
sender-receiver distance was equal to 30 and 70
meters when the cards operated at 11 and 2 Mbps,
respectively.
11Impact of Ground on TX
The Fresnel Zone Effect
Most of the radio-wave energy is within the First
Fresnel Zone, i.e., the inner 60 of the Fresnel
zone. Hence, if this inner part contacts the
ground (or other objects) the energy loss is
significant R1 is highly dependent on the nodes
distance. For example, when the sender and the
receiver are at an height of 1 meter from the
ground, the First Fresnel Zone has a contact with
the ground only if D gt 33 meters
12Physical Carrier Sensing
d(1,2)d(3,4) 25m d(2,3)80m Rate11 Mbps
Throughput in isolation UDP 3 Mbps TCP
1,3 Mbps
Hypothesis
interdependencies among the stations extends
beyond the transmission range and the physical
carrier sensing range, including all the four
stations, produces a correlation between active
connections
13Physical Carrier Sensing Range
HYPOTHESIS The large physical carrier sensing
range, including all the four stations, produces
a dependency between active connections
Indirect measurement increase d(2,3) until no
correlation is measured among the two sessions.
14Physical Carrier Sensing Range
The hypothesis is that dependencies are due to a
large physical carrier sensing that includes all
the stations
The idea is to increase d(2,3)x (while
d(1,2)d(3,4)10 meteres) until no correlation
(i.e., D1(x)0) is measured among the two
sessions.
15Physical Carrier Sensing Range
16802.11 Channel Model
- Some reference values
- Tx 110 m
- PCS_range 200 m
- Radiated area 300-350 m
17802.11 Channel Model
S
- Nodes at a distance d gt PCS_Range do not measure
any significant energy on the channel when S is
transmitting, therefore they can start
transmitting contemporarily to S in this case
some interference phenomena may occur if
d lt PCS_Range TX_Range(x).
18802.11 Channel Model
- The hidden station phenomenon, as it is usually
defined in the literature, is almost impossible
with the ranges measured in our experiments - Indeed, the PCS_Range is more than twice
TX_Range(1), i.e., the larger transmission range
The RTS / CTS mechanism is of little/no help
19New Hidden station phenomenum
- Two transmitting stations, S and S1 that are
outside their respectively PCS_Range - The receiver of station S (denoted by R in the
figure) is inside the interference range
(IF_Range) of station S1 - S and S1 can be simultaneously transmitting and,
if this occurs, station R cannot receive data
from S correctly.
R1
S1
R
S
Let d be the distance between S and S1
PCS_Range lt d lt PCS_Range TX_Range(x) S and
S1 may generate a new HIDDEN node phenomenon
20New EXPOSED node
- S1 is a station at a distance d1 from S
PCS_Range lt d1 lt PCS_RangeTX_Range(x) - E is inside the PCS_Range of S
- S1 can start transmitting, with a rate x, towards
the station E - E cannot reply because it observes a busy channel
due to the ongoing station S transmissions
d
S1
E
R
S
PCS range - TX_range (1)
PCS_range
Nodes at distance d PCS_Range - TX_Range(1) lt
d lt PCS_Range are new EXPOSED
nodes
21Conclusions
- 802.11 channel model shows that hidden station
phenomenon is impossible, but other new hidden
station phenomenon can appear. - There is also a never analyzed Exposed node
phenomenon - A new coordination mechanisms need to be designed
to extend the coordination in the channel access
beyond the PCS_Range
MAC alone cannot solve the problem CROSS
LAYERING MAC-Routing
22Questions ?
- References
- Deliverable D5
- Giuseppe Anastasi, Eleonora Borgia, Marco Conti,
Enrico Gregori, Wi-Fi in Ad Hoc Mode A
Measurement Study, Proc. IEEE PerCom 2004,
Orlando, Florida, March 2004. - G. Anastasi, M. Conti, E. Gregori, IEEE 802.11
Ad Hoc Networks Protocols, Performance and Open
Issues, Mobile Ad hoc networking, S. Basagni, M.
Conti, S. Giordano, I. Stojmenovic (Editors),
IEEE Press and John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New
York, 2004. -
Thank You !
23Conclusions
- The transmission ranges are
- much shorter than assumed in simulation analysis
- Not constant but highly variable in time, in
space and height, even in the same session - The carrier-sensing range is about twice
TX_Range(1), i.e., the larger transmission range
and it does not depend on data rate - The dynamics of an IEEE 802.11b system are
significantly complicated by the existence of
different transmission (TXDATA and TXControl) and
carrier-sensing ranges existing simultaneously on
the channel
A new coordination mechanisms need to be designed
to extend the coordination in the channel access
beyond the PCS_Range
24Fresnel Zone (2)
- The channel power loss depends on the contact
between the Fresnel zone and the ground - The Fresnel zone for a radio beam is an
elliptical area with foci located in the sender
and the receiver - Objects in the Fresnel zone cause diffraction and
hence reduce the signal energy (most of the
radio-wave energy is within the First Fresnel
Zone, i.e., the inner 60 of the Fresnel zone) - H1 mt First Fresnel Zone touchs the ground
D33mt - H1.5 mt First Fresnel Zone touchs the ground
D73 mt - H2.0 mt First Fresnel Zone touchs the ground
D133 mt