Energy and Bandwidth
Efficiency in Wireless Networks
Speaker: Wayne E. Stark, EECS
dept, University of Michigan
Abstract: In this talk, we
consider the bandwidth efficiency and energy efficiency of wireless ad
hoc networks in which the energy supply of nodes and bandwidth are the
primary resource constraints. Energy
consumption of the receiver in order to process each coded bit is
considered as well as the wasted energy of a nonideal transmit
amplifier. A simplified network consisting of a large number of nodes
between the source and destination is considered. We consider the case
where multiple simultaneous transmission can take place provided they
sufficiently far apart (spatial reuse). The parameters we vary are the
input power to the amplifier, the error control code rate and the
transmission distance for each hop, or equivalently the number of hops
between the source and destination. The result is a
tradeoff between the energy efficiency and bandwidth efficiency of the
network similar in nature to that found by Shannon for a single link.
While Shannon's results indicate that arbitrarily low code rates
minimize the energy required for reliable communication, when nonzero
receiver processing energy is included, then the optimum code rate is
much closer to 1. We also consider the transport efficiency defined as
the number of bits per second per Hz per Joule of energy to transport
information reliably between a source and a destination node as a
single network performance metric. The transport efficiency
combines the bandwidth efficiency and energy efficiency into a single
metric. The transport efficiency for the case of no spatial reuse
decreases linearly with distance but if we allow large number of hops,
with spatial reuse the transport efficiency approaches a floor that is
independent of the path loss exponent. The minimum energy consumption
as a function of distance is shown to increase linearly as a function
of distance.