Transmission Sequence Design and Allocation for Wide Area Ad Hoc Networks
Abstract
In this paper we examine the problem of designing and allocating transmission sequences to users in a mobile ad hoc network that has no spatial boundary. A basic tenet of the transmission sequence approach for addressing media access control is that under normal operating conditions, there is no feedback triggered re-transmission. This obviously is a major departure from the Slotted-ALOHA or CSMA type approaches. While these solutions enjoy excellent throughput performance, a fundamental drawback is that they are based on feedback information. For systems without naturally defined central controller that can play the role of a base station, the task of providing feedback information could easily become unmanageable. This highlights the advantage of the feedback-free approach. A second advantage is the ability to handle unlimited spatial coverage. We propose in this paper a concept for media access control that is akin to frequency reuse. However, instead of reusing frequency, the new approach allows transmission sequences be reused. A study of the transmission sequence approach against other approaches is conducted by comparing the minimal frame lengths that can guarantee the existence of conflict-free transmissions.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.