LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Improvement of Multichannel LoRa Networks Based on Distributed Joint Queueing

Photo by thoughtcatalog from unsplash

Long range (LoRa) has gained popularity in realizing Internet of Things applications by facilitating long-range communication with low-power consumption. However, LoRa faces scalability issues due to its unsophisticated random access… Click to show full abstract

Long range (LoRa) has gained popularity in realizing Internet of Things applications by facilitating long-range communication with low-power consumption. However, LoRa faces scalability issues due to its unsophisticated random access (RA) protocol, Aloha, which is vulnerable to collision and not scalable in dense network scenarios. In contrast, distributed queuing (DQ), a collision-free contention-based RA protocol, is a promising candidate for replacing Aloha because of its near-optimal performance and independence from the traffic load and pattern. However, DQ is not compatible with LoRa, as it was initially designed to operate on CableTV that supports the full-duplex (FDX) bidirectional link. In FDX, the contention feedback overhead is negligible. Most wireless networks, such as LoRa, support the half-duplex, for which the feedback overhead is considerable. Furthermore, a reduction in efficiency is aggravated under a multichannel environment because of an unbalanced traffic load. This study proposes a joint distributed queueing protocol to consider contention for LoRa that minimizes control overhead and achieves interchannel load balancing. Our analysis shows that the proposed protocol reduces the control overhead by up to 70% compared to DQ. The protocol performance demonstrates near-optimum throughput and access delay, irrespective of the number of arrivals.

Keywords: networks based; based distributed; improvement multichannel; lora; multichannel lora; lora networks

Journal Title: IEEE Internet of Things Journal
Year Published: 2022

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.