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Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Energy Efficient Networking
Ramesh R. Rao
University of California, San Diego
- NeXtworking’03 - Chania, Crete, Greece, June 23-25,2003
The First COST-IST(EU)-NSF(USA) Workshop on EXCHANGES & TRENDS IN NETWORKING
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Introduction
Explosion of wireless devices and applications Eg. Cellular Networks, Ad Hoc Networks, Sensor
Networks Power hungry applications and shrinking form
factor Motivates need for energy aware designs
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Three Themes
Cross-layer optimization Resource ownership Batteries
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Cross-layer Optimization
Minimum energy/hops routing unsuitable
Suppose R2 is chosen as the relay Lifetime: Relay R2 will
die prematurely Throughput: More
interference Need for joint routing and
scheduling
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
The Problem is Hard
Joint optimization is an NP-hard problem Arikan (1984)
For small networks, a brute force approach works. Nuggehalli (2002)
Need for scalable and distributed algorithms which can achieve near optimal performance
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Lifetime Vs. Throughput Optimal Routes
Lifetime Optimal Routes
Lifetime=1331.6
Throughput: 1
Throughput Optimal Routes
Lifetime=839.2
Throughput=1.33
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Resource Ownership
Ownership of resources determines protocol design paradigm
Ad Hoc Network: Distributed protocols that ensure system resources are used equitably and no user gets cheated
Bandwidth Energy
Cellular Networks
System User
Ad Hoc Networks
User User
Sensor Networks
System System
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Cooperation in Ad Hoc Networks
Standard Assumption: Nodes always relay messages for other nodes!
“What’s in it for me?” No cooperation leads
to zero throughput Complete cooperation
leads to short active life.
S1
S2
S3
DR
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Cooperation in Ad Hoc Networks (Contd.)
Two Questions: How Much to relay? What strategy? (No cheating)
Answer: (Srinivasan etal Infocom 2003) Given complete information
– Each node calculates optimal level of cooperation
– Implements GTFT strategy (Nash Equilibrium)
Challenge: Learn operating point through experience with the system
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Battery Management
Maximize bits transmitted for a given battery & wireless physical interface (both have serious impairments)
Develop MAC protocols for both best battery life & throughput (Tx when channel is best)
Optimize Tx time, Rx time, Idle time, Sleep time (high power pulsed Tx time)
Coordinate power consumption with battery state (decrease average power towards end of discharge)
Operational scenario: Wireless sensor network, solar powered by day, battery powered by night, sends data intermittently
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Battery Test Set Up
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Battery Test Results
E-Tech Li-Ion Polymer Cell, 250mAh, 3.7Vdc Pulsed Discharge, 1 Second Period, 8C=2A
Center for WirelessCOMMUNICATIONS 04/18/23
Battery Tests, Summary
Li-Ion polymer secondary cell, pulsed discharge, 2x useful energy increase vs continuous discharge (charge recovery)
Lithium coin primary cell, pulsed discharge, 8x useful energy increase vs continuous discharge
Pulse constraints for charge recovery: < max on time, >min idle time, <max idle current, high pulse current levels possible, 8x to 80x manufacturer’s recommended current
Improvement scenario: Same weight, same power, much more energy or Same weight, much more power, same energy