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Energy-efficient MAC protocols for wireless sensor networks: a survey

Farhana Afroz, Robin Braun

2020International Journal of Sensor Networks33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wireless sensor network (WSN) is a network of a large number of battery-powered tiny sensor nodes wirelessly connected together to facilitate a wide range of monitoring applications. As WSN nodes are energy-constrained microelectronic devices, the primary design objective of WSNs is to minimise energy consumption to prolong the network lifetime. To achieve this goal, a range of cross-layer techniques, particularly focusing on medium access control (MAC) sublayer, is proposed targeting different WSN applications. This paper aims to survey low-power WSN MAC protocols, proposed from 2000 to the present, emphasising some general aspects including the issues addressed, the solutions proposed, design principles, strengths, drawbacks and target applications. With this aim, we mainly classify the MAC protocols into three categories: contention-based protocols, time division multiple access (TDMA)-based protocols and hybrid protocols, where the first category is further subdivided into subclasses. The development trends and potential research challenges are also discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceTime division multiple accessWireless sensor networkComputer networkEnergy consumptionEfficient energy useWirelessMultiple Access with Collision Avoidance for WirelessKey distribution in wireless sensor networksOpen researchWireless networkDistributed computingTelecommunicationsElectrical engineeringWorld Wide WebEngineeringEnergy Efficient Wireless Sensor NetworksEnergy Harvesting in Wireless NetworksIoT-based Smart Home Systems
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