Opportunistic data collection in sparse wireless sensor networks

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Abstract

Opportunistic wireless sensor networks (WSNs) have recently been proposed as solutions for many remote monitoring problems. Many such problems, including environmental monitoring, involve large deployment scenarios with lower-than-average node density, as well as a long time scale and limited budgets. Traditional approaches designed for conventional situations, and thus not optimized for these scenarios, entail unnecessary complexity and larger costs. This paper discusses the issues related with the design and test of opportunistic architectures, and presents one possible solution - CHARON (Convergent Hybrid-replication Approach to Routing in Opportunistic Networks). Both algorithm-specific and comparative simulation results are presented, as well as real-world tests using a reference implementation. A comprehensive experimental setup was also used to seek a full characterization of the devised opportunistic approach including the derivation of a simple analytical model that is able to accurately predict the opportunistic message delivery performance in the used test bed. Copyright © 2011 Jorge M. Soares et al.

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APA

Soares, J. M., Franceschinis, M., Rocha, R. M., Zhang, W., & Spirito, M. A. (2011). Opportunistic data collection in sparse wireless sensor networks. Eurasip Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking, 2011. https://doi.org/10.1155/2011/401802

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