Concurrent Low-power Listening: A New Design Paradigm for Duty-cycling Communication

Author:

Liu Daibo1ORCID,Cao Zhichao2,Jiang Hongbo1,Zhou Siwang1,Xiao Zhu1,Zeng Fanzi1

Affiliation:

1. Hunan University, Lushan Road (S), Yuelu District, Changsha, Hunan Province, P.R. China

2. Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA

Abstract

In this article, we explore a new design paradigm of duty-cycling mechanism that supports low-power devices to fully turn channel contention into transmission opportunities. To achieve this goal, we propose Concurrent Low-power Listening (CLPL) to enable contention-tolerant and concurrent media access control (MAC) for widely deployed low-power devices. The fundamental principle behind CLPL is that frequency modulated receiver can reliably demodulate the strongest signal even if cochannel interference and noise exist. By using CLPL, a sender inserts a series of tailor-made signals (namely, wake-up signal) between adjacent data frames to awaken appointed receiver, making it capable to receive the next data frame. According to system-defined maximum transmission power level, CLPL adopts an adaptive algorithm to adjust the transmission power of wake-up signals so that its signal strength is above receiver sensitivity and will not interfere with the other data frames in transit. By exploiting the spatial-temporal correlation, we further develop a light-weight wake-up signal detection method to enable a waiting sender to accurately identify the current channel condition. Then, it schedules the sender’s data frame transmissions by overlapping with those wake-up signals, without conflicting with existing data frame transmissions. We have implemented the prototype of CLPL and conducted extensive experiments on a real testbed. In comparison with the state-of-the-art low-power MAC schemes, such as ContikiMAC, A-MAC, BoX-MAC, and opportunistic scheme ORW, CLPL can improve the throughput by 2–6 times and halve the end-to-end transmission delay.

Funder

NSFC

Hunan Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China

Key Research and Development Project of Hunan Province of China

Changsha Municipal Natural Science Foundation

Zhejiang lab

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications

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