A Hybrid Lifetime Extended Directional Approach for WBANs
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- Directional antenna technology is employed in LEDA MAC for sensor nodes in different sectors. The LEDA MAC switches between multi-beam and single-beam directional mode for data reservation and transmission. The proposed single-beam transmission mode enjoys features of simplicity in system configuration, low complexity in data processing. What is more, the adaptive design in LEDA MAC avoids the impacts of deafness and hidden terminal problem, decreases the energy waste and thus extends the network lifetime.
- (2)
- The hybrid MAC combines the strength of contended and scheduled mechanism. Data request frames for reservation access the channel in contention-based mechanism and packet transmissions are in scheduled mechanism, achieving high link utilization and low packet delay in unsaturated network and reducing collision probability in saturated network. Both the data reservation and transmission are according to the User Priorities (UP), ensuring the privilege of emergency data.
- (3)
- Considering burst data, a modified adaptive superframe is proposed. A dynamic polled allocation period is designed to guarantee the on-demand and emergency data transmissions. The specific fields of frame control frame for polled allocation are supplied, which facilitates the study for other researchers.
2. Related Work
2.1. Previous Work
2.2. Preliminary Study
2.2.1. Directional Antennas
2.3. IEEE 802.15.6
3. The Proposed MAC Protocol
3.1. System Model
3.2. LEDA MAC Protocol
3.2.1. Superframe of LEDA MAC Protocol
- (1)
- Multi-Beam Transmission Period (MTP): All nodes work in multi-beam antenna mode at the start of a superframe. Simultaneous transmissions are permitted in multi-beam mode. The specific function of each phase in MTP is introduced in the following subsections.
- (a)
- Beacon: The beacon frame is transmitted by the hub at the start of each superframe to notify the network management of information, such as power management of the nodes in the WBAN, and to facilitate clock synchronization therein. All the nodes, the beams of which point to hub, can be informed.
- (b)
- Request Period (REP): Only Data Request Frames (DRFs) instead of data frames could be sent in REP in multi-beam mode. Data request frame always includes the user priority, the length of data packet, the location of nodes and any other information, as depicted in Figure 6. DRFs access the channel in CSMA/CA mechanism for slots reservation. The collision probability can be smaller because the request frame is generally short.
- (c)
- Notification Period (NTP): Hub broadcasts Notification Frames (NTFs) in NTP to notify the assignment information. The related information about transmission order and the number of time slots needed to send data in NTFs are appointed by the hub according to the information included in the DRFs gathered in REP. A user with higher UP can be assigned slots preferentially. Prioritized access of differing UPs shall be attained through the predefined relationship in Table 1.
Table 1. User priorities mapping. Priority User Priority(UP) Traffic Designation Frame Type Lowest 0 Background (BK) Data 1 Best effort (BE) Data 2 Excellent effort (EE) Data 3 Video (VI) Data 4 Voice (VO) Data or management 5 Medical data or network control Data or management 6 High priority medical data or network control Data or management Highest 7 Emergency or medical implanted event report Data - (2)
- Single-Beam Transmission Period (STP): In LEDA MAC protocol, STP is divided into two parts: single-beam data transmission period and dynamic polled access period.
- (a)
- Single-Beam Data Transmission Period (SDTP): In SDTP, hub directionally interacts with nodes in each sector according to the notification packets. Any data transmissions out of node’s allocated slots will not be initiated. The data interaction in STP is generated in an active beam, which can reduce the interference of neighbor nodes. The nodes with no data transmission will turn into inactive state to save energy.
- (b)
- Dynamic Polled Allocation Period (DPAP): Burst traffic may emerge before the last frame transaction. If slots have not been reserved for burst data, the data will have to wait until the next superframe to be transmitted, which will lead high packet delay. To solve this problem, dynamic polled allocation period is designed in STP. Hub will send control type frame I-ACK+Poll to provide polled allocation. The fields of the MAC header are listed below in Figure 7.
- (3)
- Inactive Period: Inactive state is an internal power management state that is not ready for frame transmission and reception. A node can turn to inactive state, i.e., sleep mode over some time intervals in a superframe to save energy, if it does not need to transmit a management or data type frame in the corresponding access phase. An illustrating example is shown in Figure 8. Nodes can be in sleep mode during beacon transmission time, RAP and MAP. A node is in inactive state during its scheduled allocation intervals and polled allocation intervals on determining that the remaining interval has been relinquished by itself or reclaimed by its hub due to no more pending transmissions. If there is heavy traffic for nodes to transmit in the network, they will be definitely busy throughout the superframe without inactive state.
3.2.2. Transmission Progress Description
3.3. Deafness and Hidden Terminal Problem Avoidance
4. Theoretical Analysis
4.1. Throughput
4.2. Delay
4.3. Energy Consumption
4.4. Network Lifetime
5. Simulation Results
Parameters | Value | Parameters | Value |
---|---|---|---|
Information rate | 971.4 kbps | Beacon | 15 bytes |
Superframe length | 1 s | PLCP preamble | 90 bits |
Slot length | 5 ms | PLCP header | 31bits |
Transmit power | −3 dBm | MAC header | 7 bytes |
Received power | 0 dBm | Wakeup | 8 bytes |
Directional transmit power | −25 dBm | MAC ACK size | 9 bytes |
Directional received power | −22 dBm | Payload | 255 bytes |
Inactive power | 4 μw | Buffer size | 20,000 bytes |
Turnaround time | 75 μs | Simulation time | 30 s |
pSIFS | 75 μw | Frequency band | 2400–2438.5 MHz |
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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Li, C.; Yuan, X.; Yang, L.; Song, Y. A Hybrid Lifetime Extended Directional Approach for WBANs. Sensors 2015, 15, 28005-28030. https://doi.org/10.3390/s151128005
Li C, Yuan X, Yang L, Song Y. A Hybrid Lifetime Extended Directional Approach for WBANs. Sensors. 2015; 15(11):28005-28030. https://doi.org/10.3390/s151128005
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Changle, Xiaoming Yuan, Li Yang, and Yueyang Song. 2015. "A Hybrid Lifetime Extended Directional Approach for WBANs" Sensors 15, no. 11: 28005-28030. https://doi.org/10.3390/s151128005
APA StyleLi, C., Yuan, X., Yang, L., & Song, Y. (2015). A Hybrid Lifetime Extended Directional Approach for WBANs. Sensors, 15(11), 28005-28030. https://doi.org/10.3390/s151128005