This paper presents a MAC protocol named selforganizing time division multiple-access (SO-TDMA) aiming to enable quality-of-service (QoS) provisioning for delay-sensitive applications. Channel access operation in SO-TDMA is similar to carrier-sense multiple-access (CSMA) in the beginning, but quickly converges to TDMA with an adaptive pseudo-frame structure. This approach has the benefits of TDMA in a highload traffic environment, while overcoming its disadvantages in low-load, heterogeneous traffic scenarios. Furthermore, it supports distributed and asynchronous channel-access operation as in CSMA. These are achieved by dynamically adapting the transmission opportunity duration based on the common idle/busy channel state information acquired by each node through learning, without explicit message passing. Performance comparison of CSMA, TDMA, and SO-TDMA in terms of effective capacity, system throughput, and collision probability is investigated.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Published in
IEEE Globecom Workshops (GC Wkshps)
Citation
KHAN, Y. ... et al., 2015. Self-organizing TDMA MAC protocol for effective capacity improvement in IEEE 802.11 WLANs. IN: Proceedings of 2015 IEEE Globecom Workshops (GC Wkshps), San Diego, United States, 6-10 December 2015, DOI: 10.1109/GLOCOMW.2015.7414195.