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Capture-aware staggering for concurrent transmissions

Published: 10 December 2007 Publication History

Abstract

802.11 requires bidirectional exchange (i.e., nodes reverse their roles as transmitters and receivers) and hence neighbors of both the transmitter and receiver must keep quiet for the entire duration of communication. This degrades spatial reuse, leading to low network throughput. To address this problem, power control, rate control, and carrier-sense adaptations have successfully identified possibilities of concurrency in the spatial domain. In the temporal domain, optimizations such as piggybacked Acks [1] have reduced role reversals, also enabling concurrency. Though beneficial, these improvements are bounded by the SINR requirement. Recent studies found that the SINR threshold is a dynamic value, dependent on the relative order in which the signal and the interference arrive at the receiver. This implies that under certain conditions, it might be feasible to capture a data frame in the presence of concurrent interference. If harnessed carefully, this can help improve the spatial reuse of wireless networks.

References

[1]
N. Santhapuri et al, "Piggybacked-Ack-aided Concurrent Transmissions," in ICNP Poster Session, Nov 2005.
[2]
A. Kochut et al, "Sniffing out the correct physical layer capture model in 802.11b," in ICNP, 2004.
[3]
J. Lee et al, "An experimental study on the capture effect in 802.11a networks," in WinTech, Sept. 2007.
[4]
N. Ahmed et al, "Interference mitigation in enterprise wlans through speculative scheduling," in Proc. ACM Mobicom, Sept. 2007.
  1. Capture-aware staggering for concurrent transmissions

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    cover image ACM Conferences
    CoNEXT '07: Proceedings of the 2007 ACM CoNEXT conference
    December 2007
    448 pages
    ISBN:9781595937704
    DOI:10.1145/1364654
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    Published: 10 December 2007

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