Practical applications and design challenges of wireless heterogeneous sensor networks
Heterogeneous, {hetero + genos 'type', from Greek), is defined in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary as "consisting of many different kinds of people or things" and defined in Longman Dictionary as "consisting of parts or members that are very different from each othe...
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Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Book Chapter |
Language: | English |
Published: |
IIUM Press
2011
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://irep.iium.edu.my/21949/1/Practical_Applications.pdf http://irep.iium.edu.my/21949/ http://rms.research.iium.edu.my/bookstore/default.aspx |
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Institution: | Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia |
Language: | English |
Summary: | Heterogeneous, {hetero + genos 'type', from Greek), is defined in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary as "consisting of many different kinds of people or things" and defined in Longman Dictionary as "consisting of parts or members that are very different from each other."
The design of interconnected nodes may be heterogeneous or homogeneous with the aim of catering for the design demands and purpose of various wireless applications. The heterogeneity or homogeneity of the interconnected nodes designed is with respect to their ability to sense events, transmit desired sensed data, computing and processing user queries, managing of energy resources and minimizing the complexity of the hardware design. The participating nodes in heterogeneous networks may be different in many aspects. They could have ditferent transmission radius, various kind of sensing units, different hardware power, and dit1erent power supply. Nodes with lesser energy resources serve as sensing nodes to collect physical information while nodes with more energy resources serve as data sinks.
Heterogeneity could be viewed either in terms of capability or functionality of sensor nodes. In homogeneous networks, all the participating and active nodes are alike in nature and the same transmit power level is used for their operation. These alike nodes are inherently built
with the same sensing units to track a single event [5, 9, 10]. Cluster heads and cluster members have different tasks in clustered sensor networks in the course of data delivering to the base station. An example is a tiered sensor network architecture where 802.11 mesh network comprise of high-end nodes, such as Intel XScale nodes which are deployed on a plain WSN field |
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