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Opportunistic Media Access for Multirate Ad Hoc Networks (2002)

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by B. Sadeghi , V. Kanodia , A. Sabharwal , E. Knightly
Citations:332 - 12 self
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BibTeX

@MISC{Sadeghi02opportunisticmedia,
    author = {B. Sadeghi and V. Kanodia and A. Sabharwal and E. Knightly},
    title = {Opportunistic Media Access for Multirate Ad Hoc Networks},
    year = {2002}
}

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Abstract

The IEEE 802.11 wireless media access standard supports multiple data rates at the physical layer. Moreover, various auto rate adaptation mechanisms at the medium access layer have been proposed to utilize this multi-rate capability by automatically adapting the transmission rate to best match the channel conditions. In this paper, we introduce the Opportunistic Auto Rate (OAR) protocol to better exploit durations of high-quality channels conditions. The key mechanism of the OAR protocol is to opportunistically send multiple back-to-back data packets whenever the channel quality is good. As channel coherence times typically exceed multiple packet transmission times for both mobile and nonmobile users, OAR achieves significant throughput gains as compared to state-of-the-art auto-rate adaptation mechanisms. Moreover, over longer time scales, OAR ensures that all nodes are granted channel access for the same time-shares as achieved by single-rate IEEE 802.11. We describe mechanisms to implement OAR on top of any existing auto-rate adaptation scheme in a nearly IEEE 802.11 compliant manner. We also analytically study OAR and characterize the gains in throughput as a function of the channel conditions. Finally, we perform an extensive set of ns-2 simulations to study the impact of such factors as node velocity, channel conditions, and topology on the throughput of OAR.

Keyphrases

multirate ad hoc network    channel condition    opportunistic medium access    multiple back-to-back data packet    exploit duration    channel coherence time    high-quality channel condition    multiple data rate    single-rate ieee    wireless medium access standard    medium access layer    oar protocol    significant throughput gain    opportunistic auto rate    state-of-the-art auto-rate adaptation mechanism    multi-rate capability    time scale    physical layer    compliant manner    node velocity    channel quality    key mechanism    transmission rate    nonmobile user    auto-rate adaptation scheme    various auto rate adaptation mechanism    multiple packet transmission time    channel access    ns-2 simulation    extensive set   

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