Title: Topic%203%20-%20Fundamental%20Concepts%20in%20Wireless%20Networks
1Topic 3 - Fundamental Concepts in Wireless
Networks
2(No Transcript)
3Sensor networks are another form of
infrastructureless network, with many
similarities to ad-hock
4Fundamental concepts in wireless networks
- Sharing Resources
- Cellular concepts (reuse resources)
- WLAN (shared space)
- Adhock (shared resources)
- Sensor (shared resources, large space)
5What is a Cell?
- Cell is the Basic Union in The System
- defined as the area where radio coverage is given
by one base station. - A cell has one or several frequencies, depending
on traffic load. - Fundamental idea Frequencies are reused, but not
in neighboring cells due to interference.
6Cell characteristics
- Implements space division multiplex base station
covers a certain transmission area (cell) - Mobile stations communicate only via the base
station - Advantages of cell structures
- higher capacity, higher number of users
- less transmission power needed
- more robust, decentralized
- base station deals with interference,
transmission area etc. locally - Problems
- fixed network needed for the base stations
- handover (changing from one cell to another)
necessary - interference with other cells
- Cell sizes from some 100 m in cities to, e.g., 35
km on the country side (GSM) - even less for
higher frequencies
7Different Types of Cells
8Capacity Spectrum Utilization
9Cell Planning (1/3)
- The K factor and Frequency Re-Use Distance
10Cell Planning (2/3)
11Cell Planning (3/3)
- Cell sectoring
- Directional antennas subdivide cell into 3 or 6
sectors - Might also increase cell capacity by factor of 3
or 6 - Cell splitting
- Decrease transmission power in base and mobile
- Results in more and smaller cells
- Reuse frequencies in non-contiguous cell groups
- Example ½ cell radius leads 4 fold capacity
increase
12Hierarchical Cell Structures (HCS) (1/2)
- HCS allows traffic to be directed to a preferred
cell - Each cell is defined in a particular layer
- The lower the layer, the higher the priority
- Mobiles will select a cell on the lowest layer as
long as it has sufficient signal strength, even
if higher layer cell are stronger
13WLAN Definition
- A fast-growing market introducing the flexibility
of wireless access into office, home, or
production environments. - Typically restricted in their diameter to
buildings, a campus, single rooms etc. - The global goal of WLANs is to replace office
cabling and, additionally, to introduce a higher
flexibility for ad hoc communication in, e.g.,
group meetings.
14WLAN Characteristics
- Advantages
- very flexible within radio coverage
- ad-hoc networks without previous planning
possible - wireless networks allow for the design of small,
independent devices - more robust against disasters (e.g., earthquakes,
fire) - Disadvantages
- typically very low bandwidth compared to wired
networks (11 54 Mbit/s) due to limitations in
radio transmission, higher error rates due to
interference, and higher delay/delay variation
due to extensive error correction and error
detection mechanisms - offer lower QoS
- many proprietary solutions offered by companies,
especially for higher bit-rates, standards take
their time (e.g., IEEE 802.11) slow
standardization procedures - standardized functionality plus many enhanced
features - these additional features only work in a
homogeneous environment (i.e., when adapters from
the same vendors are used for all wireless nodes)
- products have to follow many national
restrictions if working wireless, it takes a very
long time to establish global solutions
15WLAN Design goals
- global, seamless operation of WLAN products
- low power for battery use (special power saving
modes and power management functions) - no special permissions or licenses needed
(license-free band) - robust transmission technology
- simplified spontaneous cooperation at meetings
- easy to use for everyone, simple management
- protection of investment in wired networks
(support the same data types and services) - security no one should be able to read others
data, privacy no one should be able to collect
user profiles, safety low radiation - transparency concerning applications and higher
layer protocols, but also location awareness if
necessary
16WLAN Technology Overview
- Core technologies (IEEE 802.1x family)
- IEEE 802.11 (Wireless LAN)
- IEEE 802.15 (Wireless PAN Bluetooth)
- IEEE 802.16 (Wireless M(etropolitan) AN) Under
development - Facilitating technologies
- RF-Id
- IrDA
- Home-RF
17WLAN Technology
- Can be categorized according to the transmission
technique being used - Infrared (IR) LANs Very limited coverage area
(IR cant penetrate walls!) - Spread Spectrum LANs Operate in Industrial,
Scientific, and Medical (ISM) bands - Narrowband Microwave LANS Operate at microwave
frequencies but not using spread spectrum (in
licensing or ISM bands)
18WLAN infrared vs. radio transmission
- Infrared
- uses IR diodes, diffuse light, multiple
reflections (walls, furniture etc.) - Advantages
- simple, cheap, available in many mobile devices
- no licenses needed
- simple shielding possible
- Disadvantages
- interference by sunlight, heat sources etc.
- many things shield or absorb IR light
- low bandwidth
- Example
- IrDA (Infrared Data Association) interface
available everywhere
- Radio
- typically using the license free ISM band at 2.4
GHz - Advantages
- experience from wireless WAN and mobile phones
can be used - coverage of larger areas possible (radio can
penetrate walls, furniture etc.) - Disadvantages
- very limited license free frequency bands
- shielding more difficult, interference with other
electrical devices - Example
- WaveLAN, HIPERLAN, Bluetooth
19WLAN Spread Spectrum
- Most popular category!
- Spread Spectrum Communications
- Developed initially for military and intelligence
requirements - Essential idea Spread the information signal
over a wider bandwidth to make jamming and
interception more difficult - Frequency hopping
- Direct sequence spread spectrum
20WLAN infrastructure vs. ad-hoc networks
infrastructure network
AP Access Point
AP
AP
wired network
AP
ad-hoc network
21WLAN Infrastructure-based networks
- Infrastructure networks provide access to other
networks. - Communication typically takes place only between
the wireless nodes and the access point, but not
directly between the wireless nodes. - The access point does not just control medium
access, but also acts as a bridge to other
wireless or wired networks. - Several wireless networks may form one logical
wireless network - The access points together with the fixed network
in between can connect several wireless networks
to form a larger network beyond actual radio
coverage. - Network functionality lies within the access
point (controls network flow), whereas the
wireless clients can remain quite simple. - Use different access schemes with or without
collision. - Collisions may occur if medium access of the
wireless nodes and the access point is not
coordinated. - If only the access point controls medium access,
no collisions are possible. - Useful for quality of service guarantees (e.g.,
minimum bandwidth for certain nodes) - The access point may poll the single wireless
nodes to ensure the data rate. - Infrastructure-based wireless networks lose some
of the flexibility wireless networks can offer in
general - They cannot be used for disaster relief in cases
where no infrastructure is left.
22WLAN ad-hoc networks
- No need of any infrastructure to work
- greatest possible flexibility
- Each node communicate with other nodes, so no
access point controlling medium access is
necessary. - The complexity of each node is higher
- implement medium access mechanisms, forwarding
data - Nodes within an ad-hoc network can only
communicate if they can reach each other
physically - if they are within each others radio range
- if other nodes can forward the message
23WLAN Standards
WirelessLAN
2.4 GHz
5 GHz
802.11(2 Mbps)
802.11b(11 Mbps)
802.11g(22-54 Mbps)
HiSWANa(54 Mbps)
802.11a(54 Mbps)
HiperLAN2(54 Mbps)
HomeRF 2.0(10 Mbps)
Bluetooth(1 Mbps)
HomeRF 1.0(2 Mbps)
24WLAN Standards (ii)
- IEEE 802.11 and HiperLAN2 are typically
infrastructure-based networks, which additionally
support ad-hoc networking - Bluetooth is a typical wireless ad-hoc network
- IEEE 802.11b offering 11 Mbit/s at 2.4 GHz
- The same radio spectrum is used by Bluetooth
- A short-range technology to set-up wireless
personal area networks with gross data rates less
than 1 Mbit/s - IEEE released a new WLAN standard, 802.11a,
operating at 5 GHz and offering gross data rates
of 54 Mbit/s - Shading is much more severe compared to 2.4 GHz
- Depending on the SNR, propagation conditions and
the distance between sender and receiver, data
rates may drop fast - uses the same physical layer as HiperLAN2 does
- HiperLAN2 tries to give QoS guarantees
- IEEE 802.11g offering up to 54 Mbit/s at 2.4 GHz.
- Benefits from the better propagation
characteristics at 2.4 GHz compared to 5 GHz - Backward compatible to 802.11b
- IEEE 802.11e MAC enhancements for providing some
QoS
25Ad Hoc Networks Definition
- A network made up exclusively of wireless nodes
without any access points operating in
peer-to-peer configuration, grouped together in a
temporary manner.
26Ad Hoc Networks Some Features
- Lack of a centralized entity
- All the communication is carried over the
wireless medium - Rapid mobile host movements
- Limited wireless bandwidth
- Limited battery power
- Multi-hop routing
27Ad Hoc Networks Operation
- Assumption
- Unidirectional link
- Adjustable power level
- Directional antenna
- GPS
- Operation
- Broadcasting
- Routing
- Multicasting
28Ad Hoc Networks Challenges (i)
- Hidden terminal problem
- A transmits to B
- C wants transmits to B
- C does not hear As transmission
- Collision
- Exposed terminal problem
- B transmits to A
- C wants to transmit to D
- C hear Bs transmission
- Unnecessarily deferred
A
B
C
B
C
D
A
29Ad Hoc Networks Challenges (ii)
- Challenges
- Mobility
- Scalability
- Power
- Minimizing power consumption during the idle time
- Minimizing power consumption during communication
- QoS
- End to End delay
- Bandwidth management
- Probability of packet loss
30Ad Hoc Networks Broadcast (i)
- Objective
- paging a particular host
- sending an alarm signal
- finding a route to a particular host
- Two types
- Be notified -gt topology change
- Be shortest -gt finding route
- A simple mechanism Flooding
- Suffer from broadcast storm
31Ad Hoc Networks Broadcast (ii)
5 forwarding nodes 4 hop time
6 forwarding nodes 3 hop time
source
source
Be notified
Be shortest
32Ad Hoc Networks Routing
- Table Driven vs. On Demand
- DSDV, TORA, DSR, AODV
- Hierarchical and Hybrid
- ZONE
- Specific assumption
- Unidirectional link, Directional antenna, GPS
- QoS-aware
- Power, Delay, Bandwidth
33Ad Hoc Networks Multicast
- Parameter
- The delay to send a packet to each destination
- The number of nodes that is concerned in
multicast - The number of forwarding nodes
D
D
D
s
s
s
D
D
D
D
D
D
34Ad Hoc Networks Recommended Introductory Reading
- M. Frodigh, et al, "Wireless Ad Hoc Networking
The Art of Networking without a Network,"
Ericsson Review, No. 4, 2000. - F. Baker, "An outsider's view of MANET," Internet
Engineering Task Force document, 17 March 2002. - IEEE tutorial
35Sensor Networks Definition
- A sensor network is a collection of collaborating
sensor nodes (ad hoc tiny nodes with sensor
capabilities) forming a temporary network without
the aid of any central administration or support
services. - Sensor nodes can collect, process, analyze and
disseminate data in order to provide access to
information anytime and anywhere.
36Sensor Networks Some Features
- Large number of sensors
- Low energy use
- Efficient use of the small memory
- Data aggregation
- Network self-organization
- Collaborative signal processing
- Querying ability
37Sensor Networks Operation
- Sensors work in clusters
- Each cluster assigns a cluster head to manage its
sensors - Three layers
- Services layer
- Data layer
- Physical Layer
- To compensate for hardware limitations (e.g.
memory, battery, computational power) - Applications deploy a large number of sensor
nodes in the targeted region.
38Sensor Networks Challenges (i)
- Hardware design
- Communication protocols
- Applications design
- Extending the lifetime of a sensor network
- Building an intelligent data collecting system
- Topology changes very frequently
- Sensors are very limited in power
- Sensors are very prone to failures
39Sensor Networks Challenges (ii)
- Sensors use a broadcast paradigm
- Most networks are based on point to point
communication - Sensors may not have a global identification (ID)
- Very large overhead
- Dynamic environmental conditions require the
system to adapt over time to changing
connectivity and system stimuli
40Sensor Networks Aggregation
- Some sensor nodes are designed to aggregate data
received from their neighbors. - Aggregator nodes cache, process and filter data
to more meaningful information. - Aggregation is useful because
- Increased circle of knowledge
- Increased accuracy level
- Data redundancy
- To compensate for sensor nodes failing
41Sensor Networks Dissemination
- Two ways for data dissemination
- Query driven sink broadcasts one query and
sensor nodes send back a report in response - Continuous update sink node broadcasts one query
and receives continuous updates in response (more
energy consuming but more accurate) - Problems
- Intermediate nodes failing to forward a message
- Finding the shortest path (a routing protocol)
- Redundancy a sensor may receive the same data
packet more than once.
42Sensor Networks Advantages
- Coverage of a very large area through the
scattering of thousands of sensors. - Failure of individual sensors has no major impact
on the overall network. - Minimize human intervention and management.
- Work in hostile and unattended environments.
- Dynamically react to changing network conditions.
- E.g. Maintain connectivity in case of unexpected
movement of the sensor nodes.
43Sensor Networks Recommended Introductory Reading
- I. F. Akyildiz, W. Su, Y. Sankarasubramaniam, E.
Cyirci, A survey on Sensor Networks, Computer
Networks, 38(4)393-422, March 2002. - Chee-Yong Chong, S. P. Kumar, Sensor networks
evolution, opportunities, and challenges,
Proceedings of IEEE, pp 1247-1256, August 2003. - IEEE tutorial