JOURNAL ARTICLE

PAX-MAC: A Low Latency Anycast Protocol with Advanced Preamble

Abstract

Wireless sensor networks employ duty-cycles to save energy, with the cost of enlargement of end-to-end latency. Cross-layer protocols that use anycast medium access control achieve latency reduction in asynchronous duty-cycled wireless sensor networks (WSNs). A series of strobed preambles is sent in order to achieve rendezvous with the next relay, selected from a forwarding candidate set (FCS). This paper proposes PAX-MAC: Pramble Ahead Cross-layer Medium Access Control. It is a novel anycast protocol for low latency packet propagation in duty-cycled WSNs. In PAX-MAC, preambles propagate ahead of data packet, prospecting the route towards sink node, while the message is sent some hops later. Simultaneous propagation of preambles and data packets provides latency reduction. The cardinality of FCS determines the average preamble propagation speed, which is lower bounded by data packet propagation speed. Differently from other approaches, our protocol takes the data packet size into account in order to maintain an optimal distance between preamble and data to minimize latency. For determining this distance, a detailed mathematical model is introduced. The performance of several state-of-the-art asynchronous protocols was appraised and compared with PAX-MAC. Our protocol outperforms in latency all other protocols for the simulated scenarios. Its energy expenditure was compatible with the best result among the other protocols. In the worst case, PAX-MAC spent 6 % more energy than the best one for a gain of 20 % in latency.

Keywords:
Computer network Network packet Computer science Anycast Latency (audio) Asynchronous communication Wireless sensor network Preamble Real-time computing Channel (broadcasting) Telecommunications

Metrics

6
Cited By
0.85
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
34
Refs
0.73
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Energy Efficient Wireless Sensor Networks
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
Energy Harvesting in Wireless Networks
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering

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