Sensor Systems and Software. First International ICST Conference, S-CUBE 2009, Pisa, Italy, September 7-9, 2009, Revised Selected Papers

Research Article

Evaluation of the Impact of the Topology and Hidden Nodes in the Performance of a ZigBee Network

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1007/978-3-642-11528-8_18,
        author={Helena Fern\^{a}ndez-L\^{o}pez and Pedro Macedo and Jos\^{e} Afonso and J. Correia and Ricardo Sim\"{o}es},
        title={Evaluation of the Impact of the Topology and Hidden Nodes in the Performance of a ZigBee Network},
        proceedings={Sensor Systems and Software. First International ICST Conference, S-CUBE 2009, Pisa, Italy, September 7-9, 2009, Revised Selected Papers},
        proceedings_a={S-CUBE},
        year={2012},
        month={5},
        keywords={ZigBee wireless sensor networks e-Health remote vital signs monitoring},
        doi={10.1007/978-3-642-11528-8_18}
    }
    
  • Helena Fernández-López
    Pedro Macedo
    José Afonso
    J. Correia
    Ricardo Simões
    Year: 2012
    Evaluation of the Impact of the Topology and Hidden Nodes in the Performance of a ZigBee Network
    S-CUBE
    Springer
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-11528-8_18
Helena Fernández-López1,*, Pedro Macedo1,*, José Afonso1,*, J. Correia1,*, Ricardo Simões,*
  • 1: University of Minho
*Contact email: hlopez@dei.uminho.pt, pmacedo@dei.uminho.pt, jose.afonso@dei.uminho.pt, higino.correia@dei.uminho.pt, rsimoes@dep.uminho.pt

Abstract

Low power and small footprint IEEE 802.15.4/ZigBee based devices are a promising alternative to 802.11a/b/g and proprietary protocols for non-critical patient monitoring under important scenarios such as post-op and emergency rooms. However, their use in a healthcare facility to monitor several mobile patients poses several difficulties, mainly because these protocols were primarily designed to operate in low traffic load scenarios. This work presents simulation results used to evaluate the performance of an IEEE 802.15.4/ ZigBee based wireless sensors network (WSN) in a vital signs monitoring scenario, for both star and tree based network topologies. The scalability problem in non-beacon enabled networks is addressed to quantify the degradation in quality of service (QoS) markers when the number of sensor nodes increase. Additionally, the impact of hidden nodes is assessed for the star topology. Results indicate that, to achieve a delivery ratio (DR) higher than 99%, the number of electrocardiogram (ECG) nodes in a star network must not exceed 35. However, considering a tree topology, the maximum number of nodes must be reduced to 18 to maintain the same DR. The network performance is severely impacted by hidden nodes. For instance, in the absence of hidden nodes, a star network consisting of 32 ECG nodes presents a DR higher than 99%; however, if the percentage of hidden nodes is increased to 5%, it drops to 94%. If the same percentage of hidden nodes is maintained, it is necessary to reduce the number of nodes to 13 to reestablish a 99% DR.