Cognitive radio significantly mitigates the spectrum scarcity for various applications built on wireless communication. Current techniques on mobile cognitive ad hoc networks (MCADNs), however, cannot be directly applied to time-critical… Click to show full abstract
Cognitive radio significantly mitigates the spectrum scarcity for various applications built on wireless communication. Current techniques on mobile cognitive ad hoc networks (MCADNs), however, cannot be directly applied to time-critical applications due to channel interference, node mobility as well as unexpected primary user activities. In multichannel multiflow MCADNs, it becomes even worse because multiple links potentially interfere with each other. In this paper, we propose a delay-minimized routing (DMR) protocol for multichannel multiflow MCADNs. First, we formulate the DMR problem with the objective of delay minimization. Next, we propose a delay prediction model based on a conflict probability. Finally, we design the minimized path delay as a routing metric, and propose a heuristic joint routing and channel assignment algorithm to solve the DMR problem. Our DMR can find out the path with a minimal end-to-end (e2e) delay for time-critical data transmission. NS2-based simulation results demonstrate that our DMR protocol significantly outperforms related proposals in terms of average e2e delay, throughput, and packet loss rate.
               
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