Research Agenda
Students: Sheldon
Bedasse (gtg016w@mail.gatech.edu),
Jonathan Bravo (gtg980w@mail.gatech.edu)
Mentor: ElMoustapha Ould-Ahmed-Vall (eouldahm@ece.gatech.edu)
Goal:
Implementation and evaluation of various
geographical routing protocols for wireless sensor networks and their
effects on energy efficiency and communication performance
Description:
Sensor networks are composed of smart nodes,
each having sensing, communication and computing capabilities. These
networks have a wide range of application such as environmental monitoring,
target tracking, and health care, etc. Sensor nodes are powered by
batteries, which combined with the remote deployment site, makes the energy
an important, if not the most important, resource for a sensor network.
Geographical routing for wireless sensor
networks has received growing interest in recent years. Under such a scheme,
nodes use their location-awareness to route information in an
energy-efficient way. Several geographical routing protocols have been
proposed in the recent years. The aim of this project is to implement two of
these protocols in GTSNetS (the Georgia Tech Sensor Network Simulator) and
study their performance under various simulation settings. The two protocols
are: GEAR (Geographical and Energy Aware Routing) and GeRaF(Geographic
Random Forwarding).
Timeline:
October
13-October 25: Learn basics
about wireless sensor networks and the GTSNetS simulator
October
25-November 21: Learn in
detail the two geographical routing protocols
November
21-December 6: Gain
familiarity with the architecture and programming of the GTSNetS simulator
January:
Implementing the two routing protocols on GTSNetS
February:
Testing and validation of the protocols implementation
March:
Preparing and running simulation scenarios
April:
Preparing the poster and possibly a short paper