Notes
Slide Show
Outline
1
PIES: Protocol Independent Energy Saving Algorithm
  • Yasser Gadallah


  • Thomas Kunz






  • August 15, 2004
2
Presentation Outline
  • Energy Consumption in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
  • Proposed Solution: PIES
  • PIES Evaluation
  • Conclusions




3
Energy Consumption In Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
  • Many sources of energy consumption exist in mobile nodes e.g. screens, HDD, interfaces, etc
  • Our focus is energy consumed in wireless interfaces
  • Energy is consumed in sending, receiving, idle and sleep modes of operation
  • It is crucial for energy conservation that we eliminate or reduce wasted idle energy consumption which constitutes a large portion of energy consumption is wireless interfaces
  • To do this, ideally nodes need to be put to sleep when idle to save this wasted energy
4
Proposed Solution: PIES - Goals
  • Fair energy conservation: all nodes are treated equally
  • Complements existing routing algorithms from energy conservation perspective
  • Functionality that is independent of the underlying routing protocol
  • Little or no impact on network operation – no additional major traffic


5
Proposed Solution: PIES - Characteristics
  • Achieves fair energy conservation by:
    • Putting nodes to sleep for equal time periods
    • Providing the routing algorithm with energy threshold info to help it make fair energy conscious decisions
  • Fully distributed algorithm – functionality does not depend on a node or a set of nodes
  • Modular nature – easily integrated with existing routing algorithms
  • Ability to determine with certainty neighbors’ sleep state
  • Configurable in such a way that introduces no additional traffic to the network



6
PIES Evaluation – Energy Performance
7
PIES Evaluation – Packet Delivery Performance
8
PIES Evaluation – Summary
  • PIES introduces energy savings of about 50% for the conditions we used
  • It also extends network lifetime by about 70%
  • This is done while achieving higher fairness than in the case of the routing protocol alone
  • The resulting PDR is comparable to that of the routing protocol alone
  • Packet delivery latency increases with the increase of the ST/WT ratio
9
Conclusions
  • Energy is the most scarce resource for the functionality of mobile ad hoc networks
  • PIES is a solution that achieves fair energy conservation and works with existing routing algorithms
  • Simulations show that PIES achieves energy savings of about 50% and extends network lifetime by about 70%
10
Backup Slides
11
Ad Hoc Network Energy Management Issues – Energy Conservation Challenges
  • Energy conservation mechanisms should not add significant energy consumption or traffic demands on the network
  • It should be able to answer the following questions:
    • When to put the node to sleep without knowledge of traffic patterns?
    • When to wake the node up?
    • What is the sleep state of a neighbor?
    • If the neighbor is asleep when will it wake up?
  • There should be no major effect on the normal network functionality (e.g. no major traffic loss)



12
Energy-Efficient Schemes - Issues
  • Most routing energy-efficient schemes ignored idle energy consumption in their analysis
  • Non-routing energy-efficient schemes suffered one or more of the following issues:
    • No attention given to energy fairness among network nodes
    • Unrealistic assumptions e.g. traffic nodes do not forward traffic
    • Algorithm design tied to a specific underlying routing strategy
    • Large impact on the functionality of the underlying routing scheme
    • No interaction with underlying routing protocol which results in unnecessary loss of traffic
    • Heuristic methodology in determining neighbors’ sleep state
13
Proposed Solution: PIES - Operation