Routing and Relay Node Placement in Wireless Sensor Networks Powered by Ambient Energy Harvesting

Energy consumption is an important issue in the design of wireless sensor networks which typically rely on nonrenewable energy sources like batteries for power. Recent advances in ambient energy harvesting technologies have made it a viable alternative source of energy for powering wireless sensor networks perpetually. In this paper, we optimize network performance by finding the optimal routing algorithm and relay node placement scheme for wireless sensor networks powered by ambient energy harvesting. We evaluate the performance of three different variants of geographic routing algorithms and consider two relay node placement schemes, viz. uniform string topology and a cluster string topology. The performance metrics are network throughput (T), goodput (G), source sending rate (SR), efficiency (η) and data delivery ratio (DR). Simulation results obtained using the Qualnet simulator show that there is an optimal combination of routing algorithm and relay node placement scheme that maximizes the required performance metric. These results aim to provide insights into the impact of routing algorithms and relay node placement schemes on wireless sensor networks that rely solely on ambient energy harvesting for power.

[1]  Jerome P. Lynch,et al.  Two-tiered wireless sensor network architecture for structural health monitoring , 2003, SPIE Smart Structures and Materials + Nondestructive Evaluation and Health Monitoring.

[2]  P.H. Chou,et al.  Efficient Charging of Supercapacitors for Extended Lifetime of Wireless Sensor Nodes , 2008, IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics.

[3]  Peter I. Corke,et al.  Long-duration solar-powered wireless sensor networks , 2007, EmNets '07.

[4]  Charles R. Farrar,et al.  Energy Harvesting for Structural Health Monitoring Sensor Networks , 2008 .

[5]  Mani B. Srivastava,et al.  Emerging techniques for long lived wireless sensor networks , 2006, IEEE Communications Magazine.

[6]  Wen-Jong Wu,et al.  Smart Wireless Sensor Network Powered by Random Ambient Vibrations , 2006, 2006 IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics.

[7]  Joseph A. Paradiso,et al.  Energy scavenging for mobile and wireless electronics , 2005, IEEE Pervasive Computing.

[8]  Peter I. Corke,et al.  Wireless adhoc sensor and actuator networks on the farm , 2006, International Symposium on Information Processing in Sensor Networks.

[9]  S. Kim,et al.  Trio: enabling sustainable and scalable outdoor wireless sensor network deployments , 2006, 2006 5th International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks.