The Reliability of Signal Strength for Localization of High-Density ZigBee Wireless Networks

This thesis investigates the reliability of ZigBee signal strength within a high-density wireless network, specifically looking at the Link Quality Indicator (LQI) as provided by the physical layer and accessible at the networking and application layers within the stack protocol. It also investigate...

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Main Author: Rogers, Brandon Jeremy
Published: Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/199
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spelling ndltd-UTENN-oai-trace.tennessee.edu-utk_gradthes-12312011-12-13T16:15:27Z The Reliability of Signal Strength for Localization of High-Density ZigBee Wireless Networks Rogers, Brandon Jeremy This thesis investigates the reliability of ZigBee signal strength within a high-density wireless network, specifically looking at the Link Quality Indicator (LQI) as provided by the physical layer and accessible at the networking and application layers within the stack protocol. It also investigates methods by which LQI can be used for discovery, identification, and localization of nodes within a ZigBee wireless network. The thesis concentrates on practical approaches specifically as it would pertain to commissioning a high-density network for an application such as lighting control in building automation. There are seven potential algorithms proposed using factors such as minimum distance error, perceived confidence, and triangulation. Experiments, which explore the reliability of signal strength indicators, reveal that the fluctuations of the signal strength indicate that a simple, inexpensive algorithm is insufficient. Simulations, which explore varying conditions such as network layouts, node-count, and node-density, reinforce this notion; however, this thesis also shows that more complicated and expensive methods do show promising results. Using the simplest of methodologies, the experiments and simulations result in 30-35% accuracy. However, with the more complicated methodologies (using techniques such as reiteration, emulation, and cooperation), the results reveal accuracies of 80-90%. This thesis concludes from these results that a simple algorithm and methodology may not be sufficient but that there are approaches that can improve the results. However, the cost of these approaches may be deemed too high for practical use. Further exploration in these methodologies, though, should show promise that more sufficient accuracies without sacrificing too much cost are attainable. 2007-08-01 text http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/199 Masters Theses Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Electrical and Computer Engineering
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical and Computer Engineering
spellingShingle Electrical and Computer Engineering
Rogers, Brandon Jeremy
The Reliability of Signal Strength for Localization of High-Density ZigBee Wireless Networks
description This thesis investigates the reliability of ZigBee signal strength within a high-density wireless network, specifically looking at the Link Quality Indicator (LQI) as provided by the physical layer and accessible at the networking and application layers within the stack protocol. It also investigates methods by which LQI can be used for discovery, identification, and localization of nodes within a ZigBee wireless network. The thesis concentrates on practical approaches specifically as it would pertain to commissioning a high-density network for an application such as lighting control in building automation. There are seven potential algorithms proposed using factors such as minimum distance error, perceived confidence, and triangulation. Experiments, which explore the reliability of signal strength indicators, reveal that the fluctuations of the signal strength indicate that a simple, inexpensive algorithm is insufficient. Simulations, which explore varying conditions such as network layouts, node-count, and node-density, reinforce this notion; however, this thesis also shows that more complicated and expensive methods do show promising results. Using the simplest of methodologies, the experiments and simulations result in 30-35% accuracy. However, with the more complicated methodologies (using techniques such as reiteration, emulation, and cooperation), the results reveal accuracies of 80-90%. This thesis concludes from these results that a simple algorithm and methodology may not be sufficient but that there are approaches that can improve the results. However, the cost of these approaches may be deemed too high for practical use. Further exploration in these methodologies, though, should show promise that more sufficient accuracies without sacrificing too much cost are attainable.
author Rogers, Brandon Jeremy
author_facet Rogers, Brandon Jeremy
author_sort Rogers, Brandon Jeremy
title The Reliability of Signal Strength for Localization of High-Density ZigBee Wireless Networks
title_short The Reliability of Signal Strength for Localization of High-Density ZigBee Wireless Networks
title_full The Reliability of Signal Strength for Localization of High-Density ZigBee Wireless Networks
title_fullStr The Reliability of Signal Strength for Localization of High-Density ZigBee Wireless Networks
title_full_unstemmed The Reliability of Signal Strength for Localization of High-Density ZigBee Wireless Networks
title_sort reliability of signal strength for localization of high-density zigbee wireless networks
publisher Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 2007
url http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/199
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