2nd International ICST Conference on Communications and Networking in China

Research Article

Load Balanced Broadcasting in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks Using Directional Antennas

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/CHINACOM.2007.4469553,
        author={Ling Ding and Yifeng Shao and Minglu Li and Minyou Wu},
        title={Load Balanced Broadcasting in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks Using Directional Antennas},
        proceedings={2nd International ICST Conference on Communications and Networking in China},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={CHINACOM},
        year={2008},
        month={3},
        keywords={ad hoc networks  antennas  broadcasting  component  energy efficiency  life time  load balance},
        doi={10.1109/CHINACOM.2007.4469553}
    }
    
  • Ling Ding
    Yifeng Shao
    Minglu Li
    Minyou Wu
    Year: 2008
    Load Balanced Broadcasting in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks Using Directional Antennas
    CHINACOM
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/CHINACOM.2007.4469553
Ling Ding1,*, Yifeng Shao1,*, Minglu Li1,*, Minyou Wu1,*
  • 1: Department of Computer Science & Engineering Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, P.R.China
*Contact email: dingling@sjtu.edu.cn, leo_shao@sjtu.edu.cn, li-ml@cs.sjtu.edu.cn, wu-my@cs.sjtu.edu.cn

Abstract

Using directional antennas to conserve bandwidth and energy consumption in ad hoc wireless networks has attracted much attention of the research community in recent years. However, limited research has focused on applying directional antennas to broadcasting and the load balance in broadcasting. Taking the load balance into consideration, we devise a link reduction (LLR) based on broadcasting protocol for ad hoc wireless networks using directional antennas. LLR outperforms most existing omnidirectional and directional broadcasting schemes in the sense that its normalized transmission cost and redundancy are significantly reduced while the longevity of a network is greatly increased. LLR is a localized protocol based on 2-hop neighbor information and it achieves full delivery in ad hoc networks. Simulation is conducted in ideal networks where packet collision, channel contention, or node mobility is avoided.