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The New Jersey Institute of Technology's
Electronic Theses & Dissertations Project

Title: Clustered wireless sensor networks
Author: Machado, Renita Margaret
View Online: njit-etd2009-061
(xiv, 116 pages ~ 6.0 MB pdf)
Department: Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy
Program: Electrical Engineering
Document Type: Dissertation
Advisory Committee: Tekinay, Sirin (Committee co-chair)
Wang, Guiling (Committee co-chair)
Ansari, Nirwan (Committee member)
Rojas-Cessa, Roberto (Committee member)
Zhang, Yanchao (Committee member)
Li, Tiffany Jing (Committee member)
Date: 2009-05
Keywords: Wireless sensor networks
Clustered topologies
Cognitive networks
Availability: Unrestricted
Abstract:

The study of topology in randomly deployed wireless sensor networks (WSNs) is important in addressing the fundamental issue of stochastic coverage resulting from randomness in the deployment procedure and power management algorithms. This dissertation defines and studies clustered WSNs, WSNs whose topology due to the deployment procedure and the application requirements results in the phenomenon of clustering or clumping of nodes. The first part of this dissertation analyzes a range of topologies of clustered WSNs and their impact on the primary sensing objectives of coverage and connectivity. By exploiting the inherent advantages of clustered topologies of nodes, this dissertation presents techniques for optimizing the primary performance metrics of power consumption and network capacity. It analyzes clustering in the presence of obstacles, and studies varying levels of redundancy to determine the probability of coverage in the network. The proposed models for clustered WSNs embrace the domain of a wide range of topologies that are prevalent in actual real-world deployment scenarios, and call for clustering-specific protocols to enhance network performance. It has been shown that power management algorithms tailored to various clustering scenarios optimize the level of active coverage and maximize the network lifetime. The second part of this dissertation addresses the problem of edge effects and heavy traffic on queuing in clustered WSNs. In particular, an admission control model called directed ignoring model has been developed that aims to minimize the impact of edge effects in queuing by improving queuing metrics such as packet loss and wait time.


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