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5 %\usepackage[linesnumbered,ruled,vlined,commentsnumbered]{algorithm2e}
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11 %\jvol{00} \jnum{00} \jyear{2013} \jmonth{April}
15 \title{{\itshape Perimeter-based Coverage Optimization to Improve Lifetime \\
16 in Wireless Sensor Networks}}
18 \author{Ali Kadhum Idrees$^{a, b}$, Karine Deschinkel$^{a}$$^{\ast}$\thanks{$^\ast$Corresponding author. Email: karine.deschinkel@univ-fcomte.fr}, Michel Salomon$^{a}$ and Rapha\"el Couturier $^{a}$
19 $^{a}${\em{FEMTO-ST Institute, UMR 6174 CNRS, University of Franche-Comt\'e,
21 $^{b}${\em{Department of Computer Science, University of Babylon, Babylon, Iraq}} }
28 The most important problem in a Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is to optimize the
29 use of its limited energy provision, so that it can fulfill its monitoring task
30 as long as possible. Among known available approaches that can be used to
31 improve power management, lifetime coverage optimization provides activity
32 scheduling which ensures sensing coverage while minimizing the energy cost. We
33 propose such an approach called Perimeter-based Coverage Optimization protocol
34 (PeCO). It is a hybrid of centralized and distributed methods: the region of
35 interest is first subdivided into subregions and the protocol is then
36 distributed among sensor nodes in each subregion. The novelty of our approach
37 lies essentially in the formulation of a new mathematical optimization model
38 based on the perimeter coverage level to schedule sensors' activities.
39 Extensive simulation experiments demonstrate that PeCO can offer longer lifetime
40 coverage for WSNs in comparison with some other protocols.
43 Wireless Sensor Networks, Area Coverage, Energy efficiency, Optimization, Scheduling.
48 \section{Introduction}
49 \label{sec:introduction}
51 The continuous progress in Micro Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) and wireless
52 communication hardware has given rise to the opportunity to use large networks
53 of tiny sensors, called Wireless Sensor Networks
54 (WSN)~\citep{akyildiz2002wireless,puccinelli2005wireless}, to fulfill monitoring
55 tasks. A WSN consists of small low-powered sensors working together by
56 communicating with one another through multi-hop radio communications. Each node
57 can send the data it collects in its environment, thanks to its sensor, to the
58 user by means of sink nodes. The features of a WSN made it suitable for a wide
59 range of application in areas such as business, environment, health, industry,
60 military, and so on~\citep{yick2008wireless}. Typically, a sensor node contains
61 three main components~\citep{anastasi2009energy}: a sensing unit able to measure
62 physical, chemical, or biological phenomena observed in the environment; a
63 processing unit which will process and store the collected measurements; a radio
64 communication unit for data transmission and receiving.
66 The energy needed by an active sensor node to perform sensing, processing, and
67 communication is supplied by a power supply which is a battery. This battery has
68 a limited energy provision and it may be unsuitable or impossible to replace or
69 recharge it in most applications. Therefore it is necessary to deploy WSN with
70 high density in order to increase reliability and to exploit node redundancy
71 thanks to energy-efficient activity scheduling approaches. Indeed, the overlap
72 of sensing areas can be exploited to schedule alternatively some sensors in a
73 low power sleep mode and thus save energy. Overall, the main question that must
74 be answered is: how to extend the lifetime coverage of a WSN as long as possible
75 while ensuring a high level of coverage? These past few years many
76 energy-efficient mechanisms have been suggested to retain energy and extend the
77 lifetime of the WSNs~\citep{rault2014energy}.
79 This paper makes the following contributions.
81 \item A framework is devised to schedule nodes to be activated alternatively
82 such that the network lifetime is prolonged while ensuring that a certain
83 level of coverage is preserved. A key idea in the proposed framework is to
84 exploit spatial and temporal subdivision. On the one hand, the area of
85 interest is divided into several smaller subregions and, on the other hand,
86 the time line is divided into periods of equal length. In each subregion the
87 sensor nodes will cooperatively choose a leader which will schedule nodes'
88 activities, and this grouping of sensors is similar to typical cluster
90 \item A new mathematical optimization model is proposed. Instead of trying to
91 cover a set of specified points/targets as in most of the methods proposed in
92 the literature, we formulate an integer program based on perimeter coverage of
93 each sensor. The model involves integer variables to capture the deviations
94 between the actual level of coverage and the required level. Hence, an
95 optimal schedule will be obtained by minimizing a weighted sum of these
97 \item Extensive simulation experiments are conducted using the discrete event
98 simulator OMNeT++, to demonstrate the efficiency of our protocol. We have
99 compared the PeCO protocol to two approaches found in the literature:
100 DESK~\citep{ChinhVu} and GAF~\citep{xu2001geography}, and also to our previous
101 protocol DiLCO published in~\citep{Idrees2}. DiLCO uses the same framework as
102 PeCO but is based on another optimization model for sensor scheduling.
105 The rest of the paper is organized as follows. In the next section some related
106 work in the field is reviewed. Section~\ref{sec:The PeCO Protocol Description}
107 is devoted to the PeCO protocol description and Section~\ref{cp} focuses on the
108 coverage model formulation which is used to schedule the activation of sensor
109 nodes. Section~\ref{sec:Simulation Results and Analysis} presents simulations
110 results and discusses the comparison with other approaches. Finally, concluding
111 remarks are drawn and some suggestions are given for future works in
112 Section~\ref{sec:Conclusion and Future Works}.
114 \section{Related Literature}
115 \label{sec:Literature Review}
117 This section summarizes some related works regarding the coverage problem and
118 presents specific aspects of the PeCO protocol common with other literature
121 The most discussed coverage problems in literature can be classified in three
122 categories~\citep{li2013survey} according to their respective monitoring
123 objective. Hence, area coverage \citep{Misra} means that every point inside a
124 fixed area must be monitored, while target coverage~\citep{yang2014novel} refers
125 to the objective of coverage for a finite number of discrete points called
126 targets, and barrier coverage~\citep{HeShibo,kim2013maximum} focuses on
127 preventing intruders from entering into the region of interest. In
128 \citep{Deng2012} authors transform the area coverage problem into the target
129 coverage one taking into account the intersection points among disks of sensors
130 nodes or between disk of sensor nodes and boundaries. In
131 \citep{Huang:2003:CPW:941350.941367} authors prove that if the perimeters of
132 sensors are sufficiently covered it will be the case for the whole area. They
133 provide an algorithm in $O(nd~log~d)$ time to compute the perimeter-coverage of
134 each sensor. $d$ denotes the maximum number of sensors that are neighbors to a
135 sensor, and $n$ is the total number of sensors in the network. {\it In PeCO
136 protocol, instead of determining the level of coverage of a set of discrete
137 points, our optimization model is based on checking the perimeter-coverage of
138 each sensor to activate a minimal number of sensors.}
140 The major approach to extend network lifetime while preserving coverage is to
141 divide/organize the sensors into a suitable number of set covers (disjoint or
142 non-disjoint) \citep{wang2011coverage}, where each set completely covers a
143 region of interest, and to activate these set covers successively. The network
144 activity can be planned in advance and scheduled for the entire network lifetime
145 or organized in periods, and the set of active sensor nodes decided at the
146 beginning of each period \citep{ling2009energy}. In fact, many authors propose
147 algorithms working in such a periodic fashion
148 \citep{chin2007,yan2008design,pc10}. Active node selection is determined based
149 on the problem requirements (e.g. area monitoring, connectivity, or power
150 efficiency). For instance, \citet{jaggi2006} address the problem of maximizing
151 the lifetime by dividing sensors into the maximum number of disjoint subsets
152 such that each subset can ensure both coverage and connectivity. A greedy
153 algorithm is applied once to solve this problem and the computed sets are
154 activated in succession to achieve the desired network lifetime. {\it Motivated
155 by these works, PeCO protocol works in periods, where each period contains a
156 preliminary phase for information exchange and decisions, followed by a
157 sensing phase where one cover set is in charge of the sensing task.}
159 Various centralized and distributed approaches, or even a mixing of these two
160 concepts, have been proposed to extend the network lifetime
161 \citep{zhou2009variable}. In distributed
162 algorithms~\citep{ChinhVu,qu2013distributed,yangnovel} each sensor decides of
163 its own activity scheduling after an information exchange with its neighbors.
164 The main interest of such an approach is to avoid long range communications and
165 thus to reduce the energy dedicated to the communications. Unfortunately, since
166 each node has only information on its immediate neighbors (usually the one-hop
167 ones) it may make a bad decision leading to a global suboptimal solution.
168 Conversely, centralized
169 algorithms~\citep{cardei2005improving,zorbas2010solving,pujari2011high} always
170 provide nearly or close to optimal solution since the algorithm has a global
171 view of the whole network. The disadvantage of a centralized method is obviously
172 its high cost in communications needed to transmit to a single node, the base
173 station which will globally schedule nodes' activities, data from all the other
174 sensor nodes in the area. The price in communications can be huge since long
175 range communications will be needed. In fact the larger the WSN, the higher the
176 communication energy cost. {\it In order to be suitable for large-scale
177 networks, in PeCO protocol the area of interest is divided into several
178 smaller subregions, and in each one, a node called the leader is in charge of
179 selecting the active sensors for the current period. Thus PeCO protocol is
180 scalable and a globally distributed method, whereas it is centralized in each
183 Various coverage scheduling algorithms have been developed these past few years.
184 Many of them, dealing with the maximization of the number of cover sets, are
185 heuristics. These heuristics involve the construction of a cover set by
186 including in priority the sensor nodes which cover critical targets, that is to
187 say targets that are covered by the smallest number of sensors
188 \citep{berman04,zorbas2010solving}. Other approaches are based on mathematical
190 formulations~\citep{cardei2005energy,5714480,pujari2011high,Yang2014} and
191 dedicated techniques (solving with a branch-and-bound algorithm available in
192 optimization solver). The problem is formulated as an optimization problem
193 (maximization of the lifetime or number of cover sets) under target coverage and
194 energy constraints. Column generation techniques, well-known and widely
195 practiced techniques for solving linear programs with too many variables, have
197 used~\citep{castano2013column,doi:10.1080/0305215X.2012.687732,deschinkel2012column}.
198 {\it In the PeCO protocol, each leader, in charge of a subregion, solves an
199 integer program which has a twofold objective: minimize the overcoverage and
200 the undercoverage of the perimeter of each sensor.}
202 The authors in \citep{Idrees2} propose a Distributed Lifetime Coverage
203 Optimization (DiLCO) protocol, which maintains the coverage and improves the
204 lifetime in WSNs. It is an improved version of a research work presented
205 in~\citep{idrees2014coverage}. First, the area of interest is partitioned into
206 subregions using a divide-and-conquer method. DiLCO protocol is then distributed
207 on the sensor nodes in each subregion in a second step. Hence this protocol
208 combines two techniques: a leader election in each subregion, followed by an
209 optimization-based node activity scheduling performed by each elected
210 leader. The proposed DiLCO protocol is a periodic protocol where each period is
211 decomposed into 4 phases: information exchange, leader election, decision, and
212 sensing. The simulations show that DiLCO is able to increase the WSN lifetime
213 and provides improved coverage performance. {\it In the PeCO protocol, a new
214 mathematical optimization model is proposed. Instead of trying to cover a set
215 of specified points/targets as in DiLCO protocol, we formulate an integer
216 program based on perimeter coverage of each sensor. The model involves integer
217 variables to capture the deviations between the actual level of coverage and
218 the required level. The idea is that an optimal scheduling will be obtained by
219 minimizing a weighted sum of these deviations.}
221 \section{ The P{\scshape e}CO Protocol Description}
222 \label{sec:The PeCO Protocol Description}
224 %In this section, the Perimeter-based Coverage
225 %Optimization protocol is decribed in details. First we present the assumptions we made and the models
226 %we considered (in particular the perimeter coverage one), second we describe the
227 %background idea of our protocol, and third we give the outline of the algorithm
228 %executed by each node.
231 \subsection{Assumptions and Models}
234 A WSN consisting of $J$ stationary sensor nodes randomly and uniformly
235 distributed in a bounded sensor field is considered. The wireless sensors are
236 deployed in high density to ensure initially a high coverage ratio of the area
237 of interest. We assume that all the sensor nodes are homogeneous in terms of
238 communication, sensing, and processing capabilities and heterogeneous from the
239 energy provision point of view. The location information is available to a
240 sensor node either through hardware such as embedded GPS or location discovery
241 algorithms. We consider a Boolean disk coverage model, which is the most widely
242 used sensor coverage model in the literature, and all sensor nodes have a
243 constant sensing range $R_s$. Thus, all the space points within a disk centered
244 at a sensor with a radius equal to the sensing range are said to be covered by
245 this sensor. We also assume that the communication range $R_c$ satisfies $R_c
246 \geq 2 \cdot R_s$. In fact, \citet{Zhang05} proved that if the transmission
247 range fulfills the previous hypothesis, the complete coverage of a convex area
248 implies connectivity among active nodes.
250 The PeCO protocol uses the same perimeter-coverage model as
251 \citet{huang2005coverage}. It can be expressed as follows: a sensor is said to
252 be perimeter covered if all the points on its perimeter are covered by at least
253 one sensor other than itself. Authors \citet{huang2005coverage} proved that a
254 network area is $k$-covered (every point in the area is covered by at least
255 $k$~sensors) if and only if each sensor in the network is $k$-perimeter-covered
256 (perimeter covered by at least $k$ sensors).
258 Figure~\ref{figure1}(a) shows the coverage of sensor node~$0$. On this figure,
259 sensor~$0$ has nine neighbors and we have reported on its perimeter (the
260 perimeter of the disk covered by the sensor) for each neighbor the two points
261 resulting from the intersection of the two sensing areas. These points are
262 denoted for neighbor~$i$ by $iL$ and $iR$, respectively for left and right from
263 a neighboring point of view. The resulting couples of intersection points
264 subdivide the perimeter of sensor~$0$ into portions called arcs.
268 \begin{tabular}{@{}cr@{}}
269 \includegraphics[width=75mm]{figure1a.eps} & \raisebox{3.25cm}{(a)} \\
270 \includegraphics[width=75mm]{figure1b.eps} & \raisebox{2.75cm}{(b)}
272 \caption{(a) Perimeter coverage of sensor node 0 and (b) finding the arc of
273 $u$'s perimeter covered by $v$.}
277 Figure~\ref{figure1}(b) describes the geometric information used to find the
278 locations of the left and right points of an arc on the perimeter of a sensor
279 node~$u$ covered by a sensor node~$v$. Node~$v$ is supposed to be located on the
280 west side of sensor~$u$, with the following respective coordinates in the
281 sensing area~: $(v_x,v_y)$ and $(u_x,u_y)$. From the previous coordinates the
282 euclidean distance between nodes~$u$ and $v$ is computed as follows:
284 Dist(u,v)=\sqrt{\vert u_x - v_x \vert^2 + \vert u_y-v_y \vert^2},
286 while the angle~$\alpha$ is obtained through the formula:
288 \alpha = \arccos \left(\frac{Dist(u,v)}{2R_s} \right).
290 The arc on the perimeter of~$u$ defined by the angular interval $[\pi -
291 \alpha,\pi + \alpha]$ is then said to be perimeter-covered by sensor~$v$.
293 Every couple of intersection points is placed on the angular interval $[0,2\pi)$
294 in a counterclockwise manner, leading to a partitioning of the interval.
295 Figure~\ref{figure1}(a) illustrates the arcs for the nine neighbors of
296 sensor $0$ and Table~\ref{my-label} gives the position of the corresponding arcs
297 in the interval $[0,2\pi)$. More precisely, the points are
298 ordered according to the measures of the angles defined by their respective
299 positions. The intersection points are then visited one after another, starting
300 from the first intersection point after point~zero, and the maximum level of
301 coverage is determined for each interval defined by two successive points. The
302 maximum level of coverage is equal to the number of overlapping arcs. For
303 example, between~$5L$ and~$6L$ the maximum level of coverage is equal to $3$
304 (the value is highlighted in yellow at the bottom of Figure~\ref{figure2}), which
305 means that at most 2~neighbors can cover the perimeter in addition to node $0$.
306 Table~\ref{my-label} summarizes for each coverage interval the maximum level of
307 coverage and the sensor nodes covering the perimeter. The example discussed
308 above is thus given by the sixth line of the table.
312 \includegraphics[width=0.95\linewidth]{figure2.eps}
313 \caption{Maximum coverage levels for perimeter of sensor node $0$.}
318 \tbl{Coverage intervals and contributing sensors for node 0 \label{my-label}}
319 {\begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|}
321 \begin{tabular}[c]{@{}c@{}}Left \\ point \\ angle~$\alpha$ \end{tabular} & \begin{tabular}[c]{@{}c@{}}Interval \\ left \\ point\end{tabular} & \begin{tabular}[c]{@{}c@{}}Interval \\ right \\ point\end{tabular} & \begin{tabular}[c]{@{}c@{}}Maximum \\ coverage\\ level\end{tabular} & \multicolumn{5}{c|}{\begin{tabular}[c]{@{}c@{}}Set of sensors\\ involved \\ in coverage interval\end{tabular}} \\ \hline
322 0.0291 & 1L & 2L & 4 & 0 & 1 & 3 & 4 & \\ \hline
323 0.104 & 2L & 3R & 5 & 0 & 1 & 3 & 4 & 2 \\ \hline
324 0.3168 & 3R & 4R & 4 & 0 & 1 & 4 & 2 & \\ \hline
325 0.6752 & 4R & 1R & 3 & 0 & 1 & 2 & & \\ \hline
326 1.8127 & 1R & 5L & 2 & 0 & 2 & & & \\ \hline
327 1.9228 & 5L & 6L & 3 & 0 & 2 & 5 & & \\ \hline
328 2.3959 & 6L & 2R & 4 & 0 & 2 & 5 & 6 & \\ \hline
329 2.4258 & 2R & 7L & 3 & 0 & 5 & 6 & & \\ \hline
330 2.7868 & 7L & 8L & 4 & 0 & 5 & 6 & 7 & \\ \hline
331 2.8358 & 8L & 5R & 5 & 0 & 5 & 6 & 7 & 8 \\ \hline
332 2.9184 & 5R & 7R & 4 & 0 & 6 & 7 & 8 & \\ \hline
333 3.3301 & 7R & 9R & 3 & 0 & 6 & 8 & & \\ \hline
334 3.9464 & 9R & 6R & 4 & 0 & 6 & 8 & 9 & \\ \hline
335 4.767 & 6R & 3L & 3 & 0 & 8 & 9 & & \\ \hline
336 4.8425 & 3L & 8R & 4 & 0 & 3 & 8 & 9 & \\ \hline
337 4.9072 & 8R & 4L & 3 & 0 & 3 & 9 & & \\ \hline
338 5.3804 & 4L & 9R & 4 & 0 & 3 & 4 & 9 & \\ \hline
339 5.9157 & 9R & 1L & 3 & 0 & 3 & 4 & & \\ \hline
345 In the PeCO protocol, the scheduling of the sensor nodes' activities is
346 formulated with an mixed-integer program based on coverage
347 intervals~\citep{doi:10.1155/2010/926075}. The formulation of the coverage
348 optimization problem is detailed in~Section~\ref{cp}. Note that when a sensor
349 node has a part of its sensing range outside the WSN sensing field, as in
350 Figure~\ref{figure3}, the maximum coverage level for this arc is set to $\infty$
351 and the corresponding interval will not be taken into account by the
352 optimization algorithm.
357 \includegraphics[width=62.5mm]{figure3.eps}
358 \caption{Sensing range outside the WSN's area of interest.}
364 \subsection{Main Idea}
366 The WSN area of interest is, in a first step, divided into regular homogeneous
367 subregions using a divide-and-conquer algorithm. In a second step our protocol
368 will be executed in a distributed way in each subregion simultaneously to
369 schedule nodes' activities for one sensing period. Node Sensors are assumed to
370 be deployed almost uniformly over the region. The regular subdivision is made
371 such that the number of hops between any pairs of sensors inside a subregion is
372 less than or equal to 3.
374 As shown in Figure~\ref{figure4}, node activity scheduling is produced by the
375 proposed protocol in a periodic manner. Each period is divided into 4 stages:
376 Information (INFO) Exchange, Leader Election, Decision (the result of an
377 optimization problem), and Sensing. For each period there is exactly one set
378 cover responsible for the sensing task. Protocols based on a periodic scheme,
379 like PeCO, are more robust against an unexpected node failure. On the one hand,
380 if a node failure is discovered before taking the decision, the corresponding
381 sensor node will not be considered by the optimization algorithm. On the other
382 hand, if the sensor failure happens after the decision, the sensing task of the
383 network will be temporarily affected: only during the period of sensing until a
384 new period starts, since a new set cover will take charge of the sensing task in
385 the next period. The energy consumption and some other constraints can easily be
386 taken into account since the sensors can update and then exchange their
387 information (including their residual energy) at the beginning of each period.
388 However, the pre-sensing phases (INFO Exchange, Leader Election, and Decision)
389 are energy consuming, even for nodes that will not join the set cover to monitor
390 the area. Sensing period duration is adapted according to the QoS requirements
395 \includegraphics[width=85mm]{figure4.eps}
396 \caption{PeCO protocol.}
400 We define two types of packets to be used by PeCO protocol:
402 \item INFO packet: sent by each sensor node to all the nodes inside a same
403 subregion for information exchange.
404 \item ActiveSleep packet: sent by the leader to all the nodes in its subregion
405 to transmit to them their respective status (stay Active or go Sleep) during
409 Five statuses are possible for a sensor node in the network:
411 \item LISTENING: waits for a decision (to be active or not);
412 \item COMPUTATION: executes the optimization algorithm as leader to
413 determine the activities scheduling;
414 \item ACTIVE: node is sensing;
415 \item SLEEP: node is turned off;
416 \item COMMUNICATION: transmits or receives packets.
419 \subsection{PeCO Protocol Algorithm}
421 The pseudocode implementing the protocol on a node is given below. More
422 precisely, Algorithm~\ref{alg:PeCO} gives a brief description of the protocol
423 applied by a sensor node $s_k$ where $k$ is the node index in the WSN.
427 % \KwIn{all the parameters related to information exchange}
428 % \KwOut{$winer-node$ (: the id of the winner sensor node, which is the leader of current round)}
430 %\emph{Initialize the sensor node and determine it's position and subregion} \;
432 \caption{PeCO pseudocode}
433 \eIf{$RE_k \geq E_{th}$}{
434 $s_k.status$ = COMMUNICATION\;
435 Send $INFO()$ packet to other nodes in subregion\;
436 Wait $INFO()$ packet from other nodes in subregion\;
437 Update K.CurrentSize\;
438 LeaderID = Leader election\;
439 \eIf{$s_k.ID = LeaderID$}{
440 $s_k.status$ = COMPUTATION\;
441 \If{$ s_k.ID $ is Not previously selected as a Leader}{
442 Execute the perimeter coverage model\;
444 \eIf{($s_k.ID $ is the same Previous Leader) {\bf and} \\
445 \indent (K.CurrentSize = K.PreviousSize)}{
446 Use the same previous cover set for current sensing stage\;
448 Update $a^j_{ik}$; prepare data for IP~Algorithm\;
449 $\left\{\left(X_{1},\dots,X_{l},\dots,X_{K}\right)\right\}$ = Execute Integer Program Algorithm($K$)\;
450 K.PreviousSize = K.CurrentSize\;
452 $s_k.status$ = COMMUNICATION\;
453 Send $ActiveSleep()$ to each node $l$ in subregion\;
456 $s_k.status$ = LISTENING\;
457 Wait $ActiveSleep()$ packet from the Leader\;
461 Exclude $s_k$ from entering in the current sensing stage\;
466 %\noindent{\bf If} $RE_k \geq E_{th}$ {\bf then}\\
467 %\hspace*{0.6cm} \emph{$s_k.status$ = COMMUNICATION;}\\
468 %\hspace*{0.6cm} \emph{Send $INFO()$ packet to other nodes in subregion;}\\
469 %\hspace*{0.6cm} \emph{Wait $INFO()$ packet from other nodes in subregion;}\\
470 %\hspace*{0.6cm} \emph{Update K.CurrentSize;}\\
471 %\hspace*{0.6cm} \emph{LeaderID = Leader election;}\\
472 %\hspace*{0.6cm} {\bf If} $ s_k.ID = LeaderID $ {\bf then}\\
473 %\hspace*{1.2cm} \emph{$s_k.status$ = COMPUTATION;}\\
474 %\hspace*{1.2cm}{\bf If} \emph{$ s_k.ID $ is Not previously selected as a Leader} {\bf then}\\
475 %\hspace*{1.8cm} \emph{ Execute the perimeter coverage model;}\\
476 %\hspace*{1.2cm} {\bf end}\\
477 %\hspace*{1.2cm}{\bf If} \emph{($s_k.ID $ is the same Previous Leader)~And~(K.CurrentSize = K.PreviousSize)}\\
478 %\hspace*{1.8cm} \emph{ Use the same previous cover set for current sensing stage;}\\
479 %\hspace*{1.2cm} {\bf end}\\
480 %\hspace*{1.2cm} {\bf else}\\
481 %\hspace*{1.8cm}\emph{Update $a^j_{ik}$; prepare data for IP~Algorithm;}\\
482 %\hspace*{1.8cm} \emph{$\left\{\left(X_{1},\dots,X_{l},\dots,X_{K}\right)\right\}$ = Execute Integer Program Algorithm($K$);}\\
483 %\hspace*{1.8cm} \emph{K.PreviousSize = K.CurrentSize;}\\
484 %\hspace*{1.2cm} {\bf end}\\
485 %\hspace*{1.2cm}\emph{$s_k.status$ = COMMUNICATION;}\\
486 %\hspace*{1.2cm}\emph{Send $ActiveSleep()$ to each node $l$ in subregion;}\\
487 %\hspace*{1.2cm}\emph{Update $RE_k $;}\\
488 %\hspace*{0.6cm} {\bf end}\\
489 %\hspace*{0.6cm} {\bf else}\\
490 %\hspace*{1.2cm}\emph{$s_k.status$ = LISTENING;}\\
491 %\hspace*{1.2cm}\emph{Wait $ActiveSleep()$ packet from the Leader;}\\
492 %\hspace*{1.2cm}\emph{Update $RE_k $;}\\
493 %\hspace*{0.6cm} {\bf end}\\
496 %\hspace*{0.6cm} \emph{Exclude $s_k$ from entering in the current sensing stage;}\\
501 In this algorithm, $K.CurrentSize$ and $K.PreviousSize$ respectively represent
502 the current number and the previous number of living nodes in the subnetwork of
503 the subregion. At the beginning of the first period $K.PreviousSize$ is
504 initialized to zero. Initially, the sensor node checks its remaining energy
505 $RE_k$, which must be greater than a threshold $E_{th}$ in order to participate
506 in the current period. Each sensor node determines its position and its
507 subregion using an embedded GPS or a location discovery algorithm. After that,
508 all the sensors collect position coordinates, remaining energy, sensor node ID,
509 and the number of their one-hop live neighbors during the information exchange.
510 The sensors inside a same region cooperate to elect a leader. The selection
511 criteria for the leader are (in order of priority):
513 \item larger number of neighbors;
514 \item larger remaining energy;
515 \item and then in case of equality, larger index.
517 Once chosen, the leader collects information to formulate and solve the integer
518 program which allows to construct the set of active sensors in the sensing
521 \section{Perimeter-based Coverage Problem Formulation}
524 In this section, the perimeter-based coverage problem is mathematically
525 formulated. It has been proved to be a NP-hard problem
526 by \citep{doi:10.1155/2010/926075}. Authors study the coverage of the perimeter
527 of a large object requiring to be monitored. For the proposed formulation in
528 this paper, the large object to be monitored is the sensor itself (or more
529 precisely its sensing area).
531 The following notations are used throughout the section.
533 First, the following sets:
535 \item $S$ represents the set of sensor nodes;
536 \item $A \subseteq S $ is the subset of alive sensors;
537 \item $I_j$ designates the set of coverage intervals (CI) obtained for
540 $I_j$ refers to the set of coverage intervals which have been defined according
541 to the method introduced in subsection~\ref{CI}. For a coverage interval $i$,
542 let $a^j_{ik}$ denote the indicator function of whether sensor~$k$ is involved
543 in coverage interval~$i$ of sensor~$j$, that is:
547 1 & \mbox{if sensor $k$ is involved in the } \\
548 & \mbox{coverage interval $i$ of sensor $j$}, \\
549 0 & \mbox{otherwise.}\\
552 Note that $a^k_{ik}=1$ by definition of the interval.
554 Second, several variables are defined. Hence, each binary variable $X_{k}$
555 determines the activation of sensor $k$ in the sensing phase ($X_k=1$ if the
556 sensor $k$ is active or 0 otherwise). $M^j_i$ is a variable which measures the
557 undercoverage for the coverage interval $i$ corresponding to sensor~$j$. In the
558 same way, the overcoverage for the same coverage interval is given by the
561 To sustain a level of coverage equal to $l$ all along the perimeter of sensor
562 $j$, at least $l$ sensors involved in each coverage interval $i \in I_j$ of
563 sensor $j$ have to be active. According to the previous notations, the number
564 of active sensors in the coverage interval $i$ of sensor $j$ is given by
565 $\sum_{k \in A} a^j_{ik} X_k$. To extend the network lifetime, the objective is
566 to activate a minimal number of sensors in each period to ensure the desired
567 coverage level. As the number of alive sensors decreases, it becomes impossible
568 to reach the desired level of coverage for all coverage intervals. Therefore
569 variables $M^j_i$ and $V^j_i$ are introduced as a measure of the deviation
570 between the desired number of active sensors in a coverage interval and the
571 effective number. And we try to minimize these deviations, first to force the
572 activation of a minimal number of sensors to ensure the desired coverage level,
573 and if the desired level cannot be completely satisfied, to reach a coverage
574 level as close as possible to the desired one.
576 The coverage optimization problem can then be mathematically expressed as follows:
579 \text{Minimize } & \sum_{j \in S} \sum_{i \in I_j} (\alpha^j_i ~ M^j_i + \beta^j_i ~ V^j_i ) \\
580 \text{Subject to:} & \\
581 & \sum_{k \in A} ( a^j_{ik} ~ X_{k}) + M^j_i \geq l \quad \forall i \in I_j, \forall j \in S \\
582 & \sum_{k \in A} ( a^j_{ik} ~ X_{k}) - V^j_i \leq l \quad \forall i \in I_j, \forall j \in S \\
583 & X_{k} \in \{0,1\}, \forall k \in A \\
584 & M^j_i, V^j_i \in \mathbb{R}^{+}
591 %\min \sum_{j \in S} \sum_{i \in I_j} (\alpha^j_i ~ M^j_i + \beta^j_i ~ V^j_i ) & \\
592 %\textrm{subject to :} &\\
593 %\sum_{k \in A} ( a^j_{ik} ~ X_{k}) + M^j_i \geq l \quad \forall i \in I_j, \forall j \in S\\
594 %\sum_{k \in A} ( a^j_{ik} ~ X_{k}) - V^j_i \leq l \quad \forall i \in I_j, \forall j \in S\\
595 %X_{k} \in \{0,1\}, \forall k \in A \\
596 %M^j_i, V^j_i \in \mathbb{R}^{+}
601 If a given level of coverage $l$ is required for one sensor, the sensor is said
602 to be undercovered (respectively overcovered) if the level of coverage of one of
603 its CI is less (respectively greater) than $l$. If the sensor $j$ is
604 undercovered, there exists at least one of its CI (say $i$) for which the number
605 of active sensors (denoted by $l^{i}$) covering this part of the perimeter is
606 less than $l$ and in this case : $M_{i}^{j}=l-l^{i}$, $V_{i}^{j}=0$. Conversely,
607 if the sensor $j$ is overcovered, there exists at least one of its CI (say $i$)
608 for which the number of active sensors (denoted by $l^{i}$) covering this part
609 of the perimeter is greater than $l$ and in this case: $M_{i}^{j}=0$,
612 $\alpha^j_i$ and $\beta^j_i$ are nonnegative weights selected according to the
613 relative importance of satisfying the associated level of coverage. For example,
614 weights associated with coverage intervals of a specified part of a region may
615 be given by a relatively larger magnitude than weights associated with another
616 region. This kind of mixed-integer program is inspired from the model developed
617 for brachytherapy treatment planning for optimizing dose distribution
618 \citep{0031-9155-44-1-012}. The choice of the values for variables $\alpha$ and
619 $\beta$ should be made according to the needs of the application. $\alpha$
620 should be large enough to prevent undercoverage and so to reach the highest
621 possible coverage ratio. $\beta$ should be large enough to prevent overcoverage
622 and so to activate a minimum number of sensors. The mixed-integer program must
623 be solved by the leader in each subregion at the beginning of each sensing
624 phase, whenever the environment has changed (new leader, death of some sensors).
625 Note that the number of constraints in the model is constant (constraints of
626 coverage expressed for all sensors), whereas the number of variables $X_k$
627 decreases over periods, since only alive sensors (sensors with enough energy to
628 be alive during one sensing phase) are considered in the model.
630 \section{Performance Evaluation and Analysis}
631 \label{sec:Simulation Results and Analysis}
633 \subsection{Simulation Settings}
635 The WSN area of interest is supposed to be divided into 16~regular subregions
636 and we use the same energy consumption model as in our previous
637 work~\citep{Idrees2}. Table~\ref{table3} gives the chosen parameters settings.
640 \tbl{Relevant parameters for network initialization \label{table3}}{
644 Parameter & Value \\ [0.5ex]
646 % inserts single horizontal line
647 Sensing field & $(50 \times 25)~m^2 $ \\
648 WSN size & 100, 150, 200, 250, and 300~nodes \\
649 Initial energy & in range 500-700~Joules \\
650 Sensing period & duration of 60 minutes \\
651 $E_{th}$ & 36~Joules \\
654 $\alpha^j_i$ & 0.6 \\
659 To obtain experimental results which are relevant, simulations with five
660 different node densities going from 100 to 300~nodes were performed considering
661 each time 25~randomly generated networks. The nodes are deployed on a field of
662 interest of $(50 \times 25)~m^2 $ in such a way that they cover the field with a
663 high coverage ratio. Each node has an initial energy level, in Joules, which is
664 randomly drawn in the interval $[500-700]$. If its energy provision reaches a
665 value below the threshold $E_{th}=36$~Joules, the minimum energy needed for a
666 node to stay active during one period, it will no longer participate in the
667 coverage task. This value corresponds to the energy needed by the sensing phase,
668 obtained by multiplying the energy consumed in the active state (9.72 mW) with
669 the time in seconds for one period (3600 seconds), and adding the energy for the
670 pre-sensing phases. According to the interval of initial energy, a sensor may
671 be active during at most 20 periods.
673 The values of $\alpha^j_i$ and $\beta^j_i$ have been chosen to ensure a good
674 network coverage and a longer WSN lifetime. Higher priority is given to the
675 undercoverage (by setting the $\alpha^j_i$ with a larger value than $\beta^j_i$)
676 so as to prevent the non-coverage for the interval~$i$ of the sensor~$j$. On
677 the other hand, $\beta^j_i$ is assigned to a value which is slightly lower so as
678 to minimize the number of active sensor nodes which contribute in covering the
679 interval. Subsection~\ref{sec:Impact} investigates more deeply how the values of
680 both parameters affect the performance of PeCO protocol.
682 The following performance metrics are used to evaluate the efficiency of the
685 \item {\bf Network Lifetime}: the lifetime is defined as the time elapsed until
686 the coverage ratio falls below a fixed threshold. $Lifetime_{95}$ and
687 $Lifetime_{50}$ denote, respectively, the amount of time during which is
688 guaranteed a level of coverage greater than $95\%$ and $50\%$. The WSN can
689 fulfill the expected monitoring task until all its nodes have depleted their
690 energy or if the network is no more connected. This last condition is crucial
691 because without network connectivity a sensor may not be able to send to a
692 base station an event it has sensed.
693 \item {\bf Coverage Ratio (CR)} : it measures how well the WSN is able to
694 observe the area of interest. In our case, the sensor field is discretized as
695 a regular grid, which yields the following equation:
698 \mbox{CR}(\%) = \frac{\mbox{$n$}}{\mbox{$N$}} \times 100
700 where $n$ is the number of covered grid points by active sensors of every
701 subregions during the current sensing phase and $N$ is total number of grid
702 points in the sensing field. A layout of $N~=~51~\times~26~=~1326$~grid points
703 is considered in the simulations.
704 \item {\bf Active Sensors Ratio (ASR)}: a major objective of our protocol is to
705 activate as few nodes as possible, in order to minimize the communication
706 overhead and maximize the WSN lifetime. The active sensors ratio is defined as
710 \mbox{ASR}(\%) = \frac{\sum\limits_{r=1}^R \mbox{$|A_r^p|$}}{\mbox{$|J|$}} \times 100
712 where $|A_r^p|$ is the number of active sensors in the subregion $r$ in the
713 sensing period~$p$, $R$ is the number of subregions, and $|J|$ is the number
714 of sensors in the network.
715 \item {\bf Energy Consumption (EC)}: energy consumption can be seen as the total
716 energy consumed by the sensors during $Lifetime_{95}$ or $Lifetime_{50}$,
717 divided by the number of periods. The value of EC is computed according to
721 \mbox{EC} = \frac{\sum\limits_{p=1}^{P} \left( E^{\mbox{com}}_p+E^{\mbox{list}}_p+E^{\mbox{comp}}_p
722 + E^{a}_p+E^{s}_p \right)}{P},
724 where $P$ corresponds to the number of periods. The total energy consumed by
725 the sensors comes through taking into consideration four main energy
726 factors. The first one, denoted $E^{\scriptsize \mbox{com}}_p$, represents the
727 energy consumption spent by all the nodes for wireless communications during
728 period $p$. $E^{\scriptsize \mbox{list}}_p$, the next factor, corresponds to
729 the energy consumed by the sensors in LISTENING status before receiving the
730 decision to go active or sleep in period $p$. $E^{\scriptsize \mbox{comp}}_p$
731 refers to the energy needed by all the leader nodes to solve the integer
732 program during a period (COMPUTATION status). Finally, $E^a_{p}$ and
733 $E^s_{p}$ indicate the energy consumed by the WSN during the sensing phase
734 ({\it active} and {\it sleeping} nodes).
737 \subsection{Simulation Results}
739 In order to assess and analyze the performance of our protocol we have
740 implemented PeCO protocol in OMNeT++~\citep{varga} simulator. The simulations
741 were run on a DELL laptop with an Intel Core~i3~2370~M (1.8~GHz) processor (2
742 cores) whose MIPS (Million Instructions Per Second) rate is equal to 35330. To
743 be consistent with the use of a sensor node based on Atmels AVR ATmega103L
744 microcontroller (6~MHz) having a MIPS rate equal to 6, the original execution
745 time on the laptop is multiplied by 2944.2 $\left(\frac{35330}{2} \times
746 \frac{1}{6} \right)$. Energy consumption is calculated according to the power
747 consumption values, in milliWatt per second, given in Table~\ref{tab:EC}
748 based on the energy model proposed in \citep{ChinhVu}.
750 % Questions on energy consumption calculation
751 % 1 - How did you compute the value for COMPUTATION status ?
752 % 2 - I have checked the paper of Chinh T. Vu (2006) and I wonder
753 % why you completely deleted the energy due to the sensing range ?
754 % => You should have use a fixed value for the sensing rangge Rs (5 meter)
755 % => for all the nodes to compute f(Ri), which would have lead to energy values
759 \caption{Energy consumption}
761 \begin{tabular}{|l||cccc|}
763 {\bf Sensor status} & MCU & Radio & Sensor & {\it Power (mW)} \\
765 LISTENING & On & On & On & 20.05 \\
766 ACTIVE & On & Off & On & 9.72 \\
767 SLEEP & Off & Off & Off & 0.02 \\
768 COMPUTATION & On & On & On & 26.83 \\
770 \multicolumn{4}{|l}{Energy needed to send or receive a 2-bit content message} & 0.515 \\
775 The modeling language for Mathematical Programming (AMPL)~\citep{AMPL} is used
776 to generate the integer program instance in a standard format, which is then
777 read and solved by the optimization solver GLPK (GNU linear Programming Kit
778 available in the public domain) \citep{glpk} through a Branch-and-Bound method.
780 % No discussion about the execution of GLPK on a sensor ?
782 Besides PeCO, three other protocols will be evaluated for comparison
783 purposes. The first one, called DESK, is a fully distributed coverage algorithm
784 proposed by \citep{ChinhVu}. The second one, called
785 GAF~\citep{xu2001geography}, consists in dividing the monitoring area into fixed
786 squares. Then, during the decision phase, in each square, one sensor is chosen
787 to remain active during the sensing phase. The last one, the DiLCO
788 protocol~\citep{Idrees2}, is an improved version of a research work we presented
789 in~\citep{idrees2014coverage}. Let us notice that PeCO and DiLCO protocols are
790 based on the same framework. In particular, the choice for the simulations of a
791 partitioning in 16~subregions was made because it corresponds to the
792 configuration producing the best results for DiLCO. The protocols are
793 distinguished from one another by the formulation of the integer program
794 providing the set of sensors which have to be activated in each sensing
795 phase. DiLCO protocol tries to satisfy the coverage of a set of primary points,
796 whereas PeCO protocol objective is to reach a desired level of coverage for each
797 sensor perimeter. In our experimentations, we chose a level of coverage equal to
800 \subsubsection{Coverage Ratio}
802 Figure~\ref{figure5} shows the average coverage ratio for 200 deployed nodes
803 obtained with the four protocols. DESK, GAF, and DiLCO provide a slightly better
804 coverage ratio with respectively 99.99\%, 99.91\%, and 99.02\%, compared to the
805 98.76\% produced by PeCO for the first periods. This is due to the fact that at
806 the beginning PeCO protocol puts to sleep status more redundant sensors (which
807 slightly decreases the coverage ratio), while the three other protocols activate
808 more sensor nodes. Later, when the number of periods is beyond~70, it clearly
809 appears that PeCO provides a better coverage ratio and keeps a coverage ratio
810 greater than 50\% for longer periods (15 more compared to DiLCO, 40 more
811 compared to DESK). The energy saved by PeCO in the early periods allows later a
812 substantial increase of the coverage performance.
817 \includegraphics[scale=0.5] {figure5.eps}
818 \caption{Coverage ratio for 200 deployed nodes.}
822 \subsubsection{Active Sensors Ratio}
824 Having the less active sensor nodes in each period is essential to minimize the
825 energy consumption and thus to maximize the network lifetime.
826 Figure~\ref{figure6} shows the average active nodes ratio for 200 deployed
827 nodes. We observe that DESK and GAF have 30.36~\% and 34.96~\% active nodes for
828 the first fourteen rounds, and DiLCO and PeCO protocols compete perfectly with
829 only 17.92~\% and 20.16~\% active nodes during the same time interval. As the
830 number of periods increases, PeCO protocol has a lower number of active nodes in
831 comparison with the three other approaches and exhibits a slow decrease, while
832 keeping a greater coverage ratio as shown in Figure \ref{figure5}.
836 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{figure6.eps}
837 \caption{Active sensors ratio for 200 deployed nodes.}
841 \subsubsection{Energy Consumption}
843 The effect of the energy consumed by the WSN during the communication,
844 computation, listening, active, and sleep status is studied for different
845 network densities and the four approaches compared. Figures~\ref{figure7}(a)
846 and (b) illustrate the energy consumption for different network sizes and for
847 $Lifetime95$ and $Lifetime50$. The results show that PeCO protocol is the most
848 competitive from the energy consumption point of view. As shown by both figures,
849 PeCO consumes much less energy than the other methods. One might think that the
850 resolution of the integer program is too costly in energy, but the results show
851 that it is very beneficial to lose a bit of time in the selection of sensors to
852 activate. Indeed the optimization program allows to reduce significantly the
853 number of active sensors and so the energy consumption while keeping a good
854 coverage level. Let us notice that the energy overhead when increasing network
855 size is the lowest with PeCO.
859 \begin{tabular}{@{}cr@{}}
860 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{figure7a.eps} & \raisebox{2.75cm}{(a)} \\
861 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{figure7b.eps} & \raisebox{2.75cm}{(b)}
863 \caption{Energy consumption per period for (a)~$Lifetime_{95}$ and (b)~$Lifetime_{50}$.}
867 \subsubsection{Network Lifetime}
869 We observe the superiority of both PeCO and DiLCO protocols in comparison with
870 the two other approaches in prolonging the network lifetime. In
871 Figures~\ref{figure8}(a) and (b), $Lifetime95$ and $Lifetime50$ are shown for
872 different network sizes. As can be seen in these figures, the lifetime
873 increases with the size of the network, and it is clearly largest for DiLCO and
874 PeCO protocols. For instance, for a network of 300~sensors and coverage ratio
875 greater than 50\%, we can see on Figure~\ref{figure8}(b) that the lifetime is
876 about twice longer with PeCO compared to DESK protocol. The performance
877 difference is more obvious in Figure~\ref{figure8}(b) than in
878 Figure~\ref{figure8}(a) because the gain induced by our protocols increases with
879 time, and the lifetime with a coverage over 50\% is far longer than with 95\%.
883 \begin{tabular}{@{}cr@{}}
884 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{figure8a.eps} & \raisebox{2.75cm}{(a)} \\
885 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{figure8b.eps} & \raisebox{2.75cm}{(b)}
887 \caption{Network Lifetime for (a)~$Lifetime_{95}$ and (b)~$Lifetime_{50}$.}
891 Figure~\ref{figure9} compares the lifetime coverage of DiLCO and PeCO protocols
892 for different coverage ratios. We denote by Protocol/50, Protocol/80,
893 Protocol/85, Protocol/90, and Protocol/95 the amount of time during which the
894 network can satisfy an area coverage greater than $50\%$, $80\%$, $85\%$,
895 $90\%$, and $95\%$ respectively, where the term Protocol refers to DiLCO or
896 PeCO. Indeed there are applications that do not require a 100\% coverage of the
897 area to be monitored. PeCO might be an interesting method since it achieves a
898 good balance between a high level coverage ratio and network lifetime. PeCO
899 always outperforms DiLCO for the three lower coverage ratios, moreover the
900 improvements grow with the network size. DiLCO is better for coverage ratios
901 near 100\%, but in that case PeCO is not ineffective for the smallest network
905 \centering \includegraphics[scale=0.55]{figure9.eps}
906 \caption{Network lifetime for different coverage ratios.}
910 \subsubsection{Impact of $\alpha$ and $\beta$ on PeCO's performance}
913 Table~\ref{my-labelx} shows network lifetime results for different values of
914 $\alpha$ and $\beta$, and a network size equal to 200 sensor nodes. On the one
915 hand, the choice of $\beta \gg \alpha$ prevents the overcoverage, and so limit
916 the activation of a large number of sensors, but as $\alpha$ is low, some areas
917 may be poorly covered. This explains the results obtained for {\it Lifetime50}
918 with $\beta \gg \alpha$: a large number of periods with low coverage ratio. On
919 the other hand, when we choose $\alpha \gg \beta$, we favor the coverage even if
920 some areas may be overcovered, so high coverage ratio is reached, but a large
921 number of sensors are activated to achieve this goal. Therefore network
922 lifetime is reduced. The choice $\alpha=0.6$ and $\beta=0.4$ seems to achieve
923 the best compromise between lifetime and coverage ratio. That explains why we
924 have chosen this setting for the experiments presented in the previous
927 %As can be seen in Table~\ref{my-labelx}, it is obvious and clear that when $\alpha$ decreased and $\beta$ increased by any step, the network lifetime for $Lifetime_{50}$ increased and the $Lifetime_{95}$ decreased. Therefore, selecting the values of $\alpha$ and $\beta$ depend on the application type used in the sensor nework. In PeCO protocol, $\alpha$ and $\beta$ are chosen based on the largest value of network lifetime for $Lifetime_{95}$.
931 \caption{The impact of $\alpha$ and $\beta$ on PeCO's performance}
933 \begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|c|}
935 $\alpha$ & $\beta$ & $Lifetime_{50}$ & $Lifetime_{95}$ \\ \hline
936 0.0 & 1.0 & 151 & 0 \\ \hline
937 0.1 & 0.9 & 145 & 0 \\ \hline
938 0.2 & 0.8 & 140 & 0 \\ \hline
939 0.3 & 0.7 & 134 & 0 \\ \hline
940 0.4 & 0.6 & 125 & 0 \\ \hline
941 0.5 & 0.5 & 118 & 30 \\ \hline
942 {\bf 0.6} & {\bf 0.4} & {\bf 94} & {\bf 57} \\ \hline
943 0.7 & 0.3 & 97 & 49 \\ \hline
944 0.8 & 0.2 & 90 & 52 \\ \hline
945 0.9 & 0.1 & 77 & 50 \\ \hline
946 1.0 & 0.0 & 60 & 44 \\ \hline
951 \section{Conclusion and Future Works}
952 \label{sec:Conclusion and Future Works}
954 In this paper we have studied the problem of perimeter coverage optimization in
955 WSNs. We have designed a new protocol, called Perimeter-based Coverage
956 Optimization, which schedules nodes' activities (wake up and sleep stages) with
957 the objective of maintaining a good coverage ratio while maximizing the network
958 lifetime. This protocol is applied in a distributed way in regular subregions
959 obtained after partitioning the area of interest in a preliminary step. It works
960 in periods and is based on the resolution of an integer program to select the
961 subset of sensors operating in active status for each period. Our work is
962 original in so far as it proposes for the first time an integer program
963 scheduling the activation of sensors based on their perimeter coverage level,
964 instead of using a set of targets/points to be covered. Several simulations have
965 been carried out to evaluate the proposed protocol. The simulation results show
966 that PeCO is more energy-efficient than other approaches, with respect to
967 lifetime, coverage ratio, active sensors ratio, and energy consumption.
969 We plan to extend our framework so that the schedules are planned for multiple
970 sensing periods. We also want to improve the integer program to take into
971 account heterogeneous sensors from both energy and node characteristics point of
972 views. Finally, it would be interesting to implement PeCO protocol using a
973 sensor-testbed to evaluate it in real world applications.
976 \subsection{Acknowledgements}
977 The authors are deeply grateful to the anonymous reviewers for their constructive advice, which improved the technical quality of the paper. As a Ph.D. student, Ali Kadhum IDREES would like to gratefully acknowledge the University of Babylon - Iraq for financial support and Campus France for the received support. This work is also partially funded by the Labex ACTION program (contract ANR-11-LABX-01-01).
979 \bibliographystyle{gENO}
980 \bibliography{biblio} %articleeo