Abstract:
Link correlation in wireless sensor networks has recently attracted a considerable amount of attention in the research community. Various pioneer works have empirically demonstrated the existence of link correlations and designed novel network protocols to exploit such link correlations. While all existing works focus on the correlated receptions at multiple receivers from a single sender, in this work we empirically demonstrate another type of link correlation, called sender-based link correlation. For sender-based link correlation, we observe wireless links from multiple senders to a single receiver are also correlated. Based on this observation, we design a two-tiered data forwarding scheme for improving the energy efficiency of unicast in the network. At the micro-level, individual nodes reduce their transmission energy consumption by temporarily switching to a new forwarder or suppressing the current transmission with the knowledge of link correlations. At the macro-level, we schedule the ordering of transmission times among neigh boring nodes so that the gains from all link correlation information in the network is maximized. Through trace-driven emulations and large scale simulations, we demonstrate that our design reduces data retransmissions by an average of 12% when compared with already highly energy efficient ETX-based protocols.