Litcius/Paper detail

Evaluation of LoRaWAN Class B efficiency for downlink traffic

Houssem Eddin Elbsir, Mohammed Kassab, Sami Bhiri, Mohamed Hédi Bedoui

202016 citationsDOI

Abstract

The LoRaWAN technology is today the object of great interest in the Internet of Things context. It defines a simple network architecture offering a wide-area wireless coverage for low rate IoT applications with low power consumption for devices. The LoRaWan class A is designed for sensor networks with a focus on the uplink. LoRaWan defines an optional MAC operation, Class B, that provides the network server with the opportunities to initiate a downlink, which can be a real solution for actuators focus network. Today, Performances of Class B are not quantified and compared to default LoRaWAN class. In this paper, we propose an evaluation of Class B performance. We offer a set of realistic evaluation scenarios based on an NS-3 simulation module that we have developed for this purpose. Results show that Class B reduces the delivery delay of downlink traffic in comparison to Class A. Class B operation significantly reduces the percentage of packet loss for downlink traffic even in congested contexts. We conclude that a trade off should be made between having low access delay or packet loss. Both the NS-3 module and data are released as an open-source to the research community.

Topics & Concepts

Telecommunications linkComputer scienceComputer networkContext (archaeology)Network packetPacket lossClass (philosophy)Real-time computingBiologyPaleontologyArtificial intelligenceIoT Networks and ProtocolsEnergy Harvesting in Wireless NetworksWireless Body Area Networks