Fluid-Flow Modeling of a Relay Node in an IEEE 802.11 Wireless Ad-Hoc Network
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| Publication date | 2007 |
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| Book title | Managing Traffic Performance in Converged Networks |
| Book subtitle | 20th International Teletraffic Congress, ITC20 2007, Ottawa, Canada, June 17-21, 2007 : proceedings |
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| Series | Lecture Notes in Computer Science |
| Event | 20th International Teletraffic Congress, ITC20 2007, Ottawa, Canada, June 17-21, 2007. |
| Pages (from-to) | 321-334 |
| Publisher | Berlin: Springer |
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| Abstract |
Wireless ad-hoc networks are based on shared medium technology where the nodes arrange access to the medium in a distributed way independent of their current traffic demand. This has the inherent drawback that a node that serves as a relay node for transmissions of multiple neighboring nodes is prone to become a performance "bottleneck". In the present paper such a bottleneck node is modeled via an idealized fluid-flow queueing model in which the complex packet-level behavior (mac) is represented by a small set of parameters. We extensively validate the model by ad-hoc network simulations that include all the details of the widely used ieee 802.11 mac-protocol. Further we show that the overall flow transfer time of a multi-hop flow, which consists of the sum of the delays at the individual nodes, improves by granting a larger share of the medium capacity to the bottleneck node. Such alternative resource sharing strategies can be enforced in real systems by deploying the recently standardized ieee 802.11e mac-protocol. We propose a mapping between the parameter settings of ieee 802.11e and the fluid-flow model, and validate the fluid-flow model and the parameter mapping with detailed system simulations.
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| Document type | Conference contribution |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-72990-7_31 |
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