Enhancements and Challenges in IEEE 802.11ah - A Sub-Gigahertz Wi-Fi for IoT Applications
Qutab-ud-din, Muhammad (2015)
Qutab-ud-din, Muhammad
2015
Master's Degree Programme in Electrical Engineering
Tieto- ja sähkötekniikan tiedekunta - Faculty of Computing and Electrical Engineering
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Hyväksymispäivämäärä
2015-12-09
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tty-201511231745
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tty-201511231745
Tiivistelmä
Internet of Things is a concept which brings ubiquitous connectivity to objects that we interact with in the course of our daily activities. With the projected estimates of the number of wireless connected devices reaching massive numbers, it is expected to revolutionize our daily lives significantly. This sort of augmented connectivity will enable new applications in a myriad of domains including smart cities, smart houses, healthcare monitoring, industrial automation and smart metering. These applications entail efficient operation of wireless networks with a large number of energy constrained devices. However, the existing infrastructure for wireless connectivity is not designed to handle such volume of projected growth.
Addressing this requirement, the IEEE 802.11ah task group is working on a new amendment of the IEEE 802.11 standard, suitable for high density WLAN networks in the sub 1 GHz band. It is expected to be the prevalent standard in many Internet of Things (IoT) and Machine to Machine (M2M) applications where it will support long-range and energy-efficient communication in dense network environments. Therefore, significant changes in the legacy 802.11 standards have been proposed to improve the network performance in high contention scenarios. In this thesis we evaluate the performance of many of the new features that have been introduced in the new standard including the Restricted Access Window, Sectorization and Subchannel Selective Transmission mechanisms by means of analytical and simulated models. We propose novel Medium Access Control (MAC) layer algorithms which are shown to have improved the throughput and energy efficiency performance in IEEE 802.11ah networks. We consider practical deployment scenarios in our simulations and evaluate the effects of challenges such as dense
networks, interference from neighboring cells and duty cycle limitations on the performance metrics. Overall, we find that the advanced new features make 802.11ah standard a true IoT-enabling technology towards seamless integration of massive amount of connected devices in the future. Our research effort supports the notion that IEEE 802.11ah will be a key technology for future IoT and M2M applications especially in long-range and energy efficient deployments.
Addressing this requirement, the IEEE 802.11ah task group is working on a new amendment of the IEEE 802.11 standard, suitable for high density WLAN networks in the sub 1 GHz band. It is expected to be the prevalent standard in many Internet of Things (IoT) and Machine to Machine (M2M) applications where it will support long-range and energy-efficient communication in dense network environments. Therefore, significant changes in the legacy 802.11 standards have been proposed to improve the network performance in high contention scenarios. In this thesis we evaluate the performance of many of the new features that have been introduced in the new standard including the Restricted Access Window, Sectorization and Subchannel Selective Transmission mechanisms by means of analytical and simulated models. We propose novel Medium Access Control (MAC) layer algorithms which are shown to have improved the throughput and energy efficiency performance in IEEE 802.11ah networks. We consider practical deployment scenarios in our simulations and evaluate the effects of challenges such as dense
networks, interference from neighboring cells and duty cycle limitations on the performance metrics. Overall, we find that the advanced new features make 802.11ah standard a true IoT-enabling technology towards seamless integration of massive amount of connected devices in the future. Our research effort supports the notion that IEEE 802.11ah will be a key technology for future IoT and M2M applications especially in long-range and energy efficient deployments.