posted on 2017-01-31, 05:05authored bySadat, Anwar
Cluster-based routing protocols for wireless sensor networks have proved to be a very
popular and effective innovation. They are inherently energy efficient and scalable
owing to the distributed nature and hierarchical organization of sensor nodes, as well
as the use of cluster heads in data reception, aggregation and transmission. However,
their reliability is very limited because of the potential for sudden break down and the
traffic congestion in a cluster head. A wireless communication link is also vulnerable to
interference and noise. In addition, to form an optimal cluster is a NP hard problem.
These problems make it very challenging to improve the reliability and energy efficiency
simultaneously. To address these issues, this thesis proposes a number of clusterbased
routing protocols that consider many challenging issues, such as the cluster
number determination, the inter-cluster communication cost, the link quality and traffic
congestion during the node clustering phase.
This thesis contributes four innovative methods that improve both the reliability
and energy efficiency of a wireless sensor network simultaneously. The first of these contributions
is an optimum backup clustering technique, which reduces the re-clustering
overhead of the network and safeguard a cluster head node from sudden break down.
The second method, reliable and energy efficient inter-cluster communication, reduces
the chance of a cluster head breakdown by developing routing paths that consider the
optimal inter-cluster communication cost. This method also considers data loss due to
poor link quality and congestion at the CH node. The third method, optimum cluster
number determination technique for uniform wireless sensor network, integrates the
wireless link quality factor analytically for estimating the optimal cluster number to
be used in any suitable clustering protocol. Finally, joint optimization of number and
allocation of clusters is introduced, which calculates the optimum cluster number at
the time of node clustering. This is applicable in a wireless sensor network with both
uniform and non-uniform node distributions.
The performance of all the proposed methods is evaluated along with the computational complexity analysis and message overhead. To check whether the method
promotes a sustainable environment, performance analysis of the backup clustering
scheme has been presented for a certain portion of sensor nodes equipped with a solar
cell. Statistical tests confirm that the new clustering methods exhibit significant
improvements in terms of both reliability and energy efficiency over the most popular
contemporary clustering protocols (e.g. HEED and only one existing backup clustering
technique) with the comparable computational complexity and message overhead.
History
Campus location
Australia
Principal supervisor
Gour Karmakar
Additional supervisor 1
David Green
Additional supervisor 2
Arkady Zaslavsky
Year of Award
2011
Department, School or Centre
Information Technology (Monash University Gippsland)