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Green WLANs: On-demand WLAN Infrastructures
"... Enterprise wireless local area networks (WLANs) that consist of a high-density of hundreds to thousands of access points (APs) are being deployed rapidly in corporate offices and university campuses. The primary purpose of these deployments is to satisfy user demands for high bandwidth, mobility, an ..."
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Enterprise wireless local area networks (WLANs) that consist of a high-density of hundreds to thousands of access points (APs) are being deployed rapidly in corporate offices and university campuses. The primary purpose of these deployments is to satisfy user demands for high bandwidth, mobility, and reliability. However, our recent study of two such WLANs showed that these networks are rarely used at their peak capacity, and the majority of their resources are frequently idle. In this paper, we bring to attention that a large fraction of idle WLAN resources results in significant energy losses. Thousands of WLANs world-wide collectively compound this problem, while raising serious concerns about the energy losses that will occur in the future. In response to this compelling problem, we propose the adoption of resource on-demand (RoD) strategies for WLANs. RoD strategies power on or off WLAN APs dynamically, based on the volume and location of user demand. As a specific solution, we propose SEAR, a practical and elegant RoD strategy for high-density WLANs. We implement SEAR on two wireless networks to show that SEAR is easy to integrate in current WLANs, while it ensures no adverse impact on end-user connectivity and performance. In our experiments, SEAR reduces power consumption to 46%. Using our results we discuss several interesting problems that open future directions of research in RoD WLANs.
Dynamic resource provisioning for energy efficiency in wireless access networks: A survey and an outlook
- Commun. Surv. Tutor. IEEE 2014
"... Abstract—Traditionally, energy efficiency aspects have been included in the wireless access network design space only in the context of power control aimed at interference mitigation, and for the increase of the terminal battery lifetime. Energy consumption of network components has also, for a long ..."
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Abstract—Traditionally, energy efficiency aspects have been included in the wireless access network design space only in the context of power control aimed at interference mitigation, and for the increase of the terminal battery lifetime. Energy consumption of network components has also, for a long time, not been considered an issue, neither in equipment design, nor in network planning and management. However, in recent years, with the user demand increasing at nearly exponential pace, and margins rapidly shrinking, concerns about energy efficiency have been raised, with the objective to reduce network operational costs (not to mention the environmental issues). Installing more energy-efficient hardware does not seem to fully solve the problem, since wireless access networks are almost invariably (over)provisioned with respect to the peak user demand. This means that efficient resource management schemes, capable of controlling how much
Rural Area Wireless Mesh Networks Major Area Examination Writeup
"... Means of communication have achieved tremendous growth in the last two decades and the anywhereanytime concept is becoming a reality as the ease of deployment and the decreasing cost of usage allow a large fraction of the world’s population to use WiFi, cell phones and communication satellites. Howe ..."
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Means of communication have achieved tremendous growth in the last two decades and the anywhereanytime concept is becoming a reality as the ease of deployment and the decreasing cost of usage allow a large fraction of the world’s population to use WiFi, cell phones and communication satellites. However, the map of the information world is highly polarized: only 5 % of the African population uses the Internet