JOURNAL ARTICLE

DESYNC: Self-Organizing Desynchronization and TDMA on Wireless Sensor Networks

Abstract

Desynchronization is a novel primitive for sensor networks: it implies that nodes perfectly interleave periodic events to occur in a round-robin schedule. This primitive can be used to evenly distribute sampling burden in a group of nodes, schedule sleep cycles, or organize a collision-free TDMA schedule for transmitting wireless messages. Here we present Desync, a biologically-inspired self-maintaining algorithm for desynchronization in a single-hop network. We present (1) theoretical results showing convergence, (2) experimental results on TinyOS-based Telos sensor motes, and (3) a DESYNC-based TDMA protocol. Desync-TDMA addresses two weaknesses of traditional TDMA: it does not require a global clock and it automatically adjusts to the number of participating nodes, so that bandwidth is always fully utilized. Experimental results show a reduction in message loss under high contention from approximately 58% to less than 1%, as well as a 25% increase in throughput over the default Telos MAC protocol.

Keywords:
Time division multiple access Computer science Wireless sensor network Computer network Schedule Throughput Wireless Real-time computing Distributed computing Telecommunications

Metrics

61
Cited By
4.54
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
14
Refs
0.94
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
Energy Efficient Wireless Sensor Networks
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
Network Time Synchronization Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
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