A PROTOCOL SUITE FOR WIRELESS PERSONAL AREA NETWORKS

A Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN) is an ad hoc network that consists of devices that surround an individual or an object. Bluetooth® technology is especially suitable for formation of WPANs due to the pervasiveness of devices with Bluetooth® chipsets, its operation in the unlicensed Industrial...

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Main Author: Persson, Karl E.
Format: Others
Published: UKnowledge 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_diss/698
http://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1701&context=gradschool_diss
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spelling ndltd-uky.edu-oai-uknowledge.uky.edu-gradschool_diss-17012015-04-11T05:02:38Z A PROTOCOL SUITE FOR WIRELESS PERSONAL AREA NETWORKS Persson, Karl E. A Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN) is an ad hoc network that consists of devices that surround an individual or an object. Bluetooth® technology is especially suitable for formation of WPANs due to the pervasiveness of devices with Bluetooth® chipsets, its operation in the unlicensed Industrial, Scientific, Medical (ISM) frequency band, and its interference resilience. Bluetooth® technology has great potential to become the de facto standard for communication between heterogeneous devices in WPANs. The piconet, which is the basic Bluetooth® networking unit, utilizes a Master/Slave (MS) configuration that permits only a single master and up to seven active slave devices. This structure limitation prevents Bluetooth® devices from directly participating in larger Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (MANETs) and Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs). In order to build larger Bluetooth® topologies, called scatternets, individual piconets must be interconnected. Since each piconet has a unique frequency hopping sequence, piconet interconnections are done by allowing some nodes, called bridges, to participate in more than one piconet. These bridge nodes divide their time between piconets by switching between Frequency Hopping (FH) channels and synchronizing to the piconet's master. In this dissertation we address scatternet formation, routing, and security to make Bluetooth® scatternet communication feasible. We define criteria for efficient scatternet topologies, describe characteristics of different scatternet topology models as well as compare and contrast their properties, classify existing scatternet formation approaches based on the aforementioned models, and propose a distributed scatternet formation algorithm that efficiently forms a scatternet topology and is resilient to node failures. We propose a hybrid routing algorithm, using a bridge link agnostic approach, that provides on-demand discovery of destination devices by their address or by the services that devices provide to their peers, by extending the Service Discovery Protocol (SDP) to scatternets. We also propose a link level security scheme that provides secure communication between adjacent piconet masters, within what we call an Extended Scatternet Neighborhood (ESN). 2009-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_diss/698 http://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1701&context=gradschool_diss University of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations UKnowledge Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN)|Bluetooth|Piconet|Scatternet Formation|Scatternet Routing Computer Sciences Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN)|Bluetooth|Piconet|Scatternet Formation|Scatternet Routing
Computer Sciences
Engineering
spellingShingle Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN)|Bluetooth|Piconet|Scatternet Formation|Scatternet Routing
Computer Sciences
Engineering
Persson, Karl E.
A PROTOCOL SUITE FOR WIRELESS PERSONAL AREA NETWORKS
description A Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN) is an ad hoc network that consists of devices that surround an individual or an object. Bluetooth® technology is especially suitable for formation of WPANs due to the pervasiveness of devices with Bluetooth® chipsets, its operation in the unlicensed Industrial, Scientific, Medical (ISM) frequency band, and its interference resilience. Bluetooth® technology has great potential to become the de facto standard for communication between heterogeneous devices in WPANs. The piconet, which is the basic Bluetooth® networking unit, utilizes a Master/Slave (MS) configuration that permits only a single master and up to seven active slave devices. This structure limitation prevents Bluetooth® devices from directly participating in larger Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (MANETs) and Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs). In order to build larger Bluetooth® topologies, called scatternets, individual piconets must be interconnected. Since each piconet has a unique frequency hopping sequence, piconet interconnections are done by allowing some nodes, called bridges, to participate in more than one piconet. These bridge nodes divide their time between piconets by switching between Frequency Hopping (FH) channels and synchronizing to the piconet's master. In this dissertation we address scatternet formation, routing, and security to make Bluetooth® scatternet communication feasible. We define criteria for efficient scatternet topologies, describe characteristics of different scatternet topology models as well as compare and contrast their properties, classify existing scatternet formation approaches based on the aforementioned models, and propose a distributed scatternet formation algorithm that efficiently forms a scatternet topology and is resilient to node failures. We propose a hybrid routing algorithm, using a bridge link agnostic approach, that provides on-demand discovery of destination devices by their address or by the services that devices provide to their peers, by extending the Service Discovery Protocol (SDP) to scatternets. We also propose a link level security scheme that provides secure communication between adjacent piconet masters, within what we call an Extended Scatternet Neighborhood (ESN).
author Persson, Karl E.
author_facet Persson, Karl E.
author_sort Persson, Karl E.
title A PROTOCOL SUITE FOR WIRELESS PERSONAL AREA NETWORKS
title_short A PROTOCOL SUITE FOR WIRELESS PERSONAL AREA NETWORKS
title_full A PROTOCOL SUITE FOR WIRELESS PERSONAL AREA NETWORKS
title_fullStr A PROTOCOL SUITE FOR WIRELESS PERSONAL AREA NETWORKS
title_full_unstemmed A PROTOCOL SUITE FOR WIRELESS PERSONAL AREA NETWORKS
title_sort protocol suite for wireless personal area networks
publisher UKnowledge
publishDate 2009
url http://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_diss/698
http://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1701&context=gradschool_diss
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