Object XMLDocument
Object XMLDocument
Applications:
Crisis & Catastrophe Management Mobile Asset Assistive Technologies Secure Access & Protection Education Management for the Disabled of Assets
Slide - 2
Slide - 3
Sense-and-respond Systems:
Background
Sentient networks: Computer networks composed of embedded nodes with onboard sensing, computational, and communication capability used for autonomous environmental monitoring Actuators: Responsive services/ devices offering sensor or environmental control Future (next decade) Smart dust Low cost Heterogeneous networks Disposable
Past (80s(80s-90s) Military acoustic networks Air-defense radars DARPA-lead projects [SensIT]
Present (last 5 yrs.) Multi-modal devices Ad hoc comm. Pervasive Small form factor
Industrial apps.
Slide - 4
SenseSense-andand-respond systems
Wireless Sensor Networks and Applications
Sensor
Temp., light, humidity, chemicals, acoustics, vibration
Computer
4 MHz Atmel ATmega 128L (equiv. to original 82 IBM PC)
S CR
Radio
2.4 GHz IEEE 802.15.4, <100m TX range
Base station
Features
Offers macroscopic observation for realreal-time environmental/contextual interaction SelfSelf-organizing, selfself-regulating, and selfself-repairing systems MultiMulti-hop or directdirect-connect configurations to base station(s) station(s) Current state extremely applicationapplication-oriented!!!
Slide - 5
SenseSense-andand-respond systems
Wireless sensor networks and applications
Sensor
Temp., light, humidity, chemicals, acoustics, vibration
Computer
4 MHz Atmel ATmega 128L (equiv. to original 82 IBM PC)
S CR
Radio
2.4 GHz IEEE 802.15.4, <100m TX range
Base station
Practical applications Enemy intrusion detection Habitat monitoring Structural monitoring Home automation and safety Traffic control Supply chain management (RFID)
Slide - 6
SenseSense-andand-respond systems
Salient Challenges
Constrained resources
Limited CPU, battery, and storage Premium communication costs
Ad hoc routing
Dynamic topology
Transient wireless links and devices
Slide - 7
Slide - 8
Slide - 9
Slide - 10
ESCORT: Motivation
Wireless communication is a premium cost Transient wireless links threaten application integrity
Experiments show that at least 20% of nodes exhibit at least 10% packet loss, and at least 10% of nodes exhibit more than 30% packet loss Assuming an ARQ protocol is used, transmission cost increases as link quality worsens
Function/ component Transmission (full power) Reception Radio (sleep) Sensor board (full power) Sensor board (sleep) CPU (full power) CPU (sleep) Operating current (mA) mA)
25 8 <1 <1A 5 5A 8 8A
Slide - 11
ESCORT: Overview
Communal node Source Sink
Shared neighbor
Blue and orange nodes form communities which act as virtual nodes to the network layer Orange nodes help coordinate community operation Green nodes are shared neighbors of the community Signal quality assessment, a combination of two separate metrics, is used to form clusters of redundant nodes
Prof. Dr. Ing. Ing. Kalamullah Ramli, Ramli, M.Eng
Slide - 12
The traditional approach would require at least n messages and log(n) time We require at most 3 messages in constant time using the selfself-selection algorithm
Prof. Dr. Ing. Ing. Kalamullah Ramli, Ramli, M.Eng
Slide - 13
SSR: Overview
Hop count
Base station
X-dim
Hop count
Packets are freely broadcast to all neighbors and selfselfselection is used to determine the forwarding node
Prof. Dr. Ing. Ing. Kalamullah Ramli, Ramli, M.Eng
Slide - 14
Slide - 15
Slide - 16
The End
Slide - 17