Adaptive synchronization in IEEE802.15.4e networks

Industrial low-power wireless mesh networks are shifting towards time synchronized medium access control (MAC) protocols which are able to yield over 99.9% end-to-end reliability, and radio duty cycles well below 1%. In these networks, motes use time slots to communicate, and neighbor motes maintain...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Stanislowski, David, Vilajosana, Xavier, Wang, Qin, Watteyne, Thomas, Pister, Kris
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Estado:Versión aceptada para publicación
Fecha de publicación:2013
País:España
Institución:Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC)
Repositorio:O2, repositorio institucional de la UOC
OAI Identifier:oai:openaccess.uoc.edu:10609/125346
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10609/125346
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:IEEE802.15.4e
synchronization
wireless sensor networks
duty cycle
energy consumption
TSCH
sincronización
sensor de redes inalámbricas
ciclo de trabajo
consumo de energía
sincronització
xarxes de sensors sense fils
cicle de treball
consum d'energia
Energy consumption
Energia -- Consum
Energía -- Consumo
Descripción
Sumario:Industrial low-power wireless mesh networks are shifting towards time synchronized medium access control (MAC) protocols which are able to yield over 99.9% end-to-end reliability, and radio duty cycles well below 1%. In these networks, motes use time slots to communicate, and neighbor motes maintain their clocks' alignment, typically within 1ms. Temperature, supply voltage and fabrication differences cause the motes' clocks to drift with respect to one another. Neighbor motes need to resynchronize periodically through pairwise communication. This period is typically determined a priori, based on the worst case drift. In this article, we propose a novel technique which measures and models the relative clock drift between neighbor motes, thereby reducing the effective drift rate. Instead of resynchronizing at a preset rate, neighbor motes re-synchronize only when needed. This reduces the minimum achievable duty cycle of an idle network by a factor of 10, which, in turn, lowers the mote power consumption, and extends the network lifetime. This Adaptive Synchronization is implemented as part of IEEE802.15.4e in the OpenWSN protocol stack, and is validated through extensive experimentation.