A qualitative comparison of different logical topologies for Wireless Sensor Networks

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Abstract

Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) are formed by a large collection of power-conscious wireless-capable sensors without the support of pre-existing infrastructure, possibly by unplanned deployment. With a sheer number of sensor nodes, their unattended deployment and hostile environment very often preclude reliance on physical configuration or physical topology. It is, therefore, often necessary to depend on the logical topology. Logical topologies govern how a sensor node communicates with other nodes in the network. In this way, logical topologies play a vital role for resource-constraint sensor networks. It is thus more intuitive to approach the constraint minimizing problems from (logical) topological point of view. Hence, this paper aims to study the logical topologies of WSNs. In doing so, a set of performance metrics is identified first. We identify various logical topologies from different application protocols of WSNs, and then compare the topologies using the set of performance metrics. © 2012 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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APA

Mamun, Q. (2012). A qualitative comparison of different logical topologies for Wireless Sensor Networks. Sensors (Switzerland), 12(11), 14887–14913. https://doi.org/10.3390/s121114887

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