AI Article Synopsis

  • Electromagnetic (EM) waves are ineffective for underwater communication due to high absorption rates in sea water, while acoustic waves, though slower, are more suitable for this purpose.
  • Underwater wireless sensor networks (UWSNs) face challenges such as node positioning and time synchronization since GNSS cannot be used in underwater settings, complicating the implementation of regular wireless sensor network protocols.
  • The SPRINT protocol has been developed to optimize both data throughput and energy efficiency in UWSNs, balancing the trade-off between minimizing hops for better throughput and selecting the nearest forwarding nodes to reduce energy consumption.

Article Abstract

Electromagnetic (EM) waves cannot propagate more than few meters in sea water due to the high absorption rate. Acoustic waves are more suitable for underwater communication, but they travel very slowly compared to EM waves. The typical speed of acoustic waves in water is 1500 m/s, whereas speed of EM waves in air is approximately 3 × 10 m/s. Therefore, the terrestrial wireless sensor network (WSN) protocols assume that the propagation delay is negligible. Hence, reactive protocols are deemed acceptable for WSNs. Other important issues related to underwater wireless sensor networks (UWSNs) are determining the position of the underwater nodes and keeping a time synchronization among the nodes. Underwater nodes can neither determine their position nor synchronize using Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) because of the short penetration of EM waves in sea water. The limited mobility of UWSN nodes and variation in the propagation speed of acoustic waves make time synchronization a challenging task for underwater acoustic networks (UASNs). For all these reasons, WSN protocols cannot be readily used in UASNs. In this work, a protocol named SPRINT is designed to achieve high data throughput and low energy operation in the nodes. There is a tradeoff between the throughput and the energy consumption in the wireless networks. Longer links mean higher energy consumption. On the other hand, the number of relay nodes or hops between the source node and the final destination node is a key factor which affects the throughput. Each hop increases the delay in the packet forwarding and, as a result, decreases the throughput. Hence, energy consumption requires the nearest nodes to be chosen as forwarding nodes, whereas the throughput requires the farthest node to be selected to minimize the number of hops. SPRINT is a cross-layer, self-organized, proactive protocol which does not require positioning equipment to determine the location of the node. The routing path from the node to the gateway is formed based on the distance. The data sending node prefers to choose the neighbor node which is closest to it. The distance is measured by the signal strength between the two nodes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6960970PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19245487DOI Listing

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