NANO SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH CENTRE PVT.LTD., AMEERPET, HYD
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DOT NET PROJECTS LIST--2013
DOT NET 2013 IEEE PAPERS
Topology control in
mobile ad hoc networks with cooperative communications
Abstract
Cooperative
communication has received tremendous interest for wireless networks. Most existing
works on cooperative communications are focused on link-level physical layer
issues. Consequently, the impacts of cooperative communications on
network-level upper layer issues, such as topology control, routing and network
capacity, are largely ignored. In this article, we propose a Capacity-Optimized
Cooperative (COCO) topology control scheme to improve the network capacity in
MANETs by jointly considering both upper layer network capacity and physical
layer cooperative communications. Through simulations, we show that physical
layer cooperative communications have significant impacts on the network
capacity, and the proposed topology control scheme can substantially improve
the network capacity in MANETs with cooperative communications.
Topology
Capacity-Optimized Cooperative
(COCO):
A
Capacity-Optimized Cooperative (COCO) topology control scheme to improve the
network capacity in MANETs by jointly optimizing transmission mode selection, relay
node selection, and interference control in MANETs with cooperative
communications. Through simulations, we show that physical layer cooperative
communications have significant impacts on the network capacity, and the
proposed topology control scheme can substantially improve the network capacity
in MANETs with cooperative communications.
Existing System
Most
existing works are focused on link-level physical layer issues, such as outage
probability and outage capacity. Consequently, the impacts of cooperative
communications on network-level upper layer issues, such as topology control, routing
and network capacity, are largely ignored. Indeed, most of current works on
wireless networks attempt to create, adapt, and manage a network on a maze of
point-to-point non-cooperative wireless links. Such architectures can be seen
as complex networks of simple links.
Disadvantages:
1.
Low Network Capacity.
2.
Communications
are focused on physical layer issues, such as decreasing outage probability and
increasing outage capacity, which are only link-wide metrics.
Proposed System
We
propose a Capacity-Optimized Cooperative (COCO) topology control scheme to
improve the network capacity in MANETs by jointly considering both upper layer
network capacity and physical layer cooperative communications. Through
simulations, we show that physical layer cooperative communications have
significant impacts on the network capacity, and the proposed topology control
scheme can substantially improve the network capacity in MANETs with cooperative
communications.
Advantages:
1.
Improve
the network capacity in MANETs.
2.
Dynamic
traffic pattern and dynamic network without a fixed infrastructure.
3.
There
are a source, a destination and several relay nodes.
4.
Cooperation
can benefit not only the physical layer, but the whole network in many
different aspects.
Modules:
1. Transmission in MANETs
2. Network Constraints
3. Relaying Strategies
4. Cooperative Communications
5. Multi-hop Transmission
1. Transmission in MANETs:
With
physical layer cooperative communications, there are three transmission manners
in MANETs: direct transmissions, multi-hop transmissions and cooperative transmissions.
Direct transmissions and multi-hop transmissions can be regarded as special types
of cooperative transmissions. A direct transmission utilizes no relays while a
multi-hop transmission does not combine signals at the destination. In Fig. 1c,
the cooperative channel is a virtual multiple-input single-output (MISO) channel,
where spatially distributed nodes are coordinated to form a virtual antenna to
emulate multi-antenna transceivers.
2. Network Constraints:
Two
constraint conditions need to be taken into consideration in the proposed COCO
topology control scheme. One is network
connectivity, which is the basic requirement in topology control. The end-to-end network connectivity is guaranteed
via a hop-by-hop manner in the objective function. Every node is in charge of
the connections to all its neighbors. If all the neighbor connections are
guaranteed, the end-to-end connectivity in the whole network can be preserved. The
other aspect that determines network capacity is the path length. An end-to-end
transmission that traverses more hops will import more data packets into the
network. Although path length is mainly determined by routing, COCO limits
dividing a long link into too many hops locally. The limitation is two hops due
to the fact that only two-hop relaying is adopted.
3. Relaying Strategies:
• Amplify-and-forward
• Decode-and-forward
In
amplify-and-forward, the relay nodes simply boost the energy of the signal
received from the sender and retransmit it to the receiver. In decode-and-forward,
the relay nodes will perform physical-layer decoding and then forward the
decoding result to the destinations. If multiple nodes are available for
cooperation, their antennas can employ a space-time code in transmitting the
relay signals. It is shown that cooperation at the physical layer can achieve
full levels of diversity similar to a MIMO system, and hence can reduce the
interference and increase the connectivity of wireless networks.
4. Cooperative Communications:
Cooperative transmissions via a cooperative diversity
occupying two consecutive slots. The destination combines the two signals from
the source and the relay to decode the information.
Cooperative communications are due to the increased understanding of the
benefits of multiple antenna systems. Although multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO)
systems have been widely acknowledged, it is difficult for some wireless mobile
devices to support multiple antennas due to the size and cost constraints.
Recent studies show that cooperative communications allow single antenna devices
to work together to exploit the spatial diversity and reap the benefits of MIMO
systems such as resistance to fading, high throughput, low transmitted power,
and resilient networks.
5. Multi-hop Transmission:
Multi-hop
transmission can be illustrated using two-hop transmission. When two-hop transmission
is used, two time slots are consumed. In the first slot, messages are
transmitted from the source to the relay, and the messages will be forwarded to
the destination in the second slot. The outage capacity of this two-hop transmission
can be derived considering the outage of each hop transmission.
HARDWARE & SOFTWARE
REQUIREMENTS:
HARDWARE REQUIREMENTS:
·
System : Pentium IV 2.4 GHz.
·
Hard Disk : 40
GB.
·
Floppy Drive : 1.44
Mb.
·
Monitor : 15 VGA Color.
·
Mouse : Logitech.
·
Ram : 512 MB.
SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS:
·
Operating system : Windows XP Professional.
·
Coding Language : C#.NET
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