Energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks

A wireless sensor network is designed to monitor events and report this information to a central location, or sink node. The information is required to efficiently travel through the network. It is the job of the routing protocol to officiate this process. With transmissions consuming the majority o...

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Main Author: Page, Jonathan Grant
Other Authors: Prof G P Hancke
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2263/27724
http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-09042008-130625/
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-up-oai-repository.up.ac.za-2263-277242017-07-20T04:11:20Z Energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks Page, Jonathan Grant Prof G P Hancke jgpage@ieee.org Flat routing Node lifetime Energy efficiency Energy consumption Wireless sensor networks Clustering Hierarchical routing UCTD A wireless sensor network is designed to monitor events and report this information to a central location, or sink node. The information is required to efficiently travel through the network. It is the job of the routing protocol to officiate this process. With transmissions consuming the majority of the energy available to a sensor node, it becomes important to limit their usage while still maintaining reliable communication with the sink node. The aim of the research covered in this dissertation was to adapt the flat and hierarchical architectures to create a new hybrid that draws on current protocol theories. The designed and developed protocol, Hybrid Energy Efficient Routing (HEER) protocol, builds upon the initial groundwork laid out by the previously developed Simple Energy Efficient Routing (SEER) protocol designed by C.J. Leuschner. Another aspect of the work was to focus on the current lack of credibility that is present in the WSN research community. The validity of SEER was examined and tested and this led to the main focus of this research, ensuring that HEER proves to be valid. The HEER protocol for wireless sensor networks is designed such that it is computationally simple, limits the number of transmissions, employs a cross-layer approach, is reliable, is energy-aware, has limited support for mobile nodes, is energy efficient, and most importantly is credible. Sensor nodes are extremely limited when it comes to their available energy resources. To maximise the node and network lifetimes requires the designed algorithm to be energy aware and as efficient as possible. A cross-layer design approach is followed which allows for the different layers of the OSI model to interact. The HEER protocol limits the number of transmissions that are used for network operation. This is achieved by using a minimal amount of messages for network setup and by selecting the optimal route. Route selection is calculated using hop count, current energy available, energy available on the receiving node, and lastly the energy required to reach the destination node. HEER combines and expands upon the method used by SEER for route selection. Network lifetime for networks of large sizes is increased, mainly due to more efficient routing of messages. The protocol was kept computationally simple and energy efficient, thus maintaining network survivability for as long as possible. Dissertation (MEng)--University of Pretoria, 2008. Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering unrestricted 2013-09-07T12:10:12Z 2008-09-09 2013-09-07T12:10:12Z 2008-04-09 2008-09-09 2008-09-04 Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2263/27724 2007 E1085/gm http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-09042008-130625/ ©University of Pretoria 2007 E1085/
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Flat routing
Node lifetime
Energy efficiency
Energy consumption
Wireless sensor networks
Clustering
Hierarchical routing
UCTD
spellingShingle Flat routing
Node lifetime
Energy efficiency
Energy consumption
Wireless sensor networks
Clustering
Hierarchical routing
UCTD
Page, Jonathan Grant
Energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks
description A wireless sensor network is designed to monitor events and report this information to a central location, or sink node. The information is required to efficiently travel through the network. It is the job of the routing protocol to officiate this process. With transmissions consuming the majority of the energy available to a sensor node, it becomes important to limit their usage while still maintaining reliable communication with the sink node. The aim of the research covered in this dissertation was to adapt the flat and hierarchical architectures to create a new hybrid that draws on current protocol theories. The designed and developed protocol, Hybrid Energy Efficient Routing (HEER) protocol, builds upon the initial groundwork laid out by the previously developed Simple Energy Efficient Routing (SEER) protocol designed by C.J. Leuschner. Another aspect of the work was to focus on the current lack of credibility that is present in the WSN research community. The validity of SEER was examined and tested and this led to the main focus of this research, ensuring that HEER proves to be valid. The HEER protocol for wireless sensor networks is designed such that it is computationally simple, limits the number of transmissions, employs a cross-layer approach, is reliable, is energy-aware, has limited support for mobile nodes, is energy efficient, and most importantly is credible. Sensor nodes are extremely limited when it comes to their available energy resources. To maximise the node and network lifetimes requires the designed algorithm to be energy aware and as efficient as possible. A cross-layer design approach is followed which allows for the different layers of the OSI model to interact. The HEER protocol limits the number of transmissions that are used for network operation. This is achieved by using a minimal amount of messages for network setup and by selecting the optimal route. Route selection is calculated using hop count, current energy available, energy available on the receiving node, and lastly the energy required to reach the destination node. HEER combines and expands upon the method used by SEER for route selection. Network lifetime for networks of large sizes is increased, mainly due to more efficient routing of messages. The protocol was kept computationally simple and energy efficient, thus maintaining network survivability for as long as possible. === Dissertation (MEng)--University of Pretoria, 2008. === Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering === unrestricted
author2 Prof G P Hancke
author_facet Prof G P Hancke
Page, Jonathan Grant
author Page, Jonathan Grant
author_sort Page, Jonathan Grant
title Energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks
title_short Energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks
title_full Energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks
title_fullStr Energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks
title_full_unstemmed Energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks
title_sort energy efficient hybrid routing protocol for wireless sensor networks
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2263/27724
http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-09042008-130625/
work_keys_str_mv AT pagejonathangrant energyefficienthybridroutingprotocolforwirelesssensornetworks
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