4 \documentclass[conference]{IEEEtran}
12 \hyphenation{op-tical net-works semi-conduc-tor}
17 \usepackage{times,amssymb,amsmath,latexsym}
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31 \usepackage[linesnumbered,ruled,vlined,commentsnumbered]{algorithm2e}
39 \title{Energy-Efficient Activity Scheduling in Heterogeneous Energy Wireless Sensor Networks}
41 % author names and affiliations
42 % use a multiple column layout for up to three different
44 \author{\IEEEauthorblockN{Ali Kadhum Idrees, Karine Deschinkel, Michel Salomon, and Rapha\"el Couturier }
45 \IEEEauthorblockA{FEMTO-ST Institute, UMR 6174 CNRS, University of Franche-Comte, Belfort, France \\
46 Email: ali.idness@edu.univ-fcomte.fr, $\lbrace$karine.deschinkel, michel.salomon, raphael.couturier$\rbrace$@univ-fcomte.fr}
47 %\email{\{ali.idness, karine.deschinkel, michel.salomon, raphael.couturier\}@univ-fcomte.fr}
49 %\IEEEauthorblockN{Homer Simpson}
50 %\IEEEauthorblockA{FEMTO-ST Institute, UMR CNRS, University of Franche-Comte, Belfort, France}
52 %\IEEEauthorblockN{James Kirk\\ and Montgomery Scott}
53 %\IEEEauthorblockA{FEMTO-ST Institute, UMR CNRS, University of Franche-Comte, Belfort, France}
59 One of the fundamental challenges in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs)
60 is the coverage preservation and the extension of the network lifetime
61 continuously and effectively when monitoring a certain area (or
62 region) of interest. In this paper a coverage optimization protocol to
63 improve the lifetime in heterogeneous energy wireless sensor networks
64 is proposed. The area of interest is first divided into subregions
65 using a divide-and-conquer method and then the scheduling of sensor node
66 activity is planned for each subregion. The proposed scheduling
67 considers rounds during which a small number of nodes, remaining
68 active for sensing, is selected to ensure coverage. Each round
69 consists of four phases: (i)~Information Exchange, (ii)~Leader
70 Election, (iii)~Decision, and (iv)~Sensing. The decision process is
71 carried out by a leader node which solves an integer program.
72 Simulation results show that the proposed approach can prolong the
73 network lifetime and improve the coverage performance.
76 %\keywords{Area Coverage, Wireless Sensor Networks, lifetime Optimization, Distributed Protocol.}
78 \IEEEpeerreviewmaketitle
80 \section{Introduction}
82 \noindent Recent years have witnessed significant advances in wireless
83 communications and embedded micro-sensing MEMS technologies which have
84 led to the emergence of wireless sensor networks as one of the most promising
85 technologies~\cite{asc02}. In fact, they present huge potential in
86 several domains ranging from health care applications to military
87 applications. A sensor network is composed of a large number of tiny
88 sensing devices deployed in a region of interest. Each device has
89 processing and wireless communication capabilities, which enable it to
90 sense its environment, to compute, to store information and to deliver
91 report messages to a base station.
92 %These sensor nodes run on batteries with limited capacities. To achieve a long life of the network, it is important to conserve battery power. Therefore, lifetime optimisation is one of the most critical issues in wireless sensor networks.
93 One of the main design issues in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) is to
94 prolong the network lifetime, while achieving acceptable quality of
95 service for applications. Indeed, sensor nodes have limited resources
96 in terms of memory, energy and computational power.
98 Since sensor nodes have limited battery life and without being able to
99 replace batteries, especially in remote and hostile environments, it
100 is desirable that a WSN should be deployed with high density because
101 spatial redundancy can then be exploited to increase the lifetime of
102 the network. In such a high density network, if all sensor nodes were
103 to be activated at the same time, the lifetime would be reduced. To
104 extend the lifetime of the network, the main idea is to take advantage
105 of the overlapping sensing regions of some sensor nodes to save
106 energy by turning off some of them during the sensing phase.
107 Obviously, the deactivation of nodes is only relevant if the coverage
108 of the monitored area is not affected. Consequently, future softwares
109 may need to adapt appropriately to achieve acceptable quality of
110 service for applications. In this paper we concentrate on the area
111 coverage problem, with the objective of maximizing the network
112 lifetime by using an adaptive scheduling. The area of interest is
113 divided into subregions and an activity scheduling for sensor nodes is
114 planned for each subregion.
115 In fact, the nodes in a subregion can be seen as a cluster where
116 each node sends sensing data to the cluster head or the sink node.
117 Furthermore, the activities in a subregion/cluster can continue even
118 if another cluster stops due to too many node failures.
119 Our scheduling scheme considers rounds, where a round starts with a
120 discovery phase to exchange information between sensors of the
121 subregion, in order to choose in a suitable manner a sensor node to
122 carry out a coverage strategy. This coverage strategy involves the
123 solving of an integer program which provides the activation of the
124 sensors for the sensing phase of the current round.
126 The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. The next section
128 reviews the related work in the field. Section~\ref{pd} is devoted to
129 the scheduling strategy for energy-efficient coverage.
130 Section~\ref{cp} gives the coverage model formulation which is used to
131 schedule the activation of sensors. Section~\ref{exp} shows the
132 simulation results obtained using the discrete event simulator on
133 OMNET++ \cite{varga}. They fully demonstrate the usefulness of the
134 proposed approach. Finally, we give concluding remarks and some
135 suggestions for future works in Section~\ref{sec:conclusion}.
137 \section{Related works}
140 \noindent This section is dedicated to the various approaches proposed
141 in the literature for the coverage lifetime maximization problem,
142 where the objective is to optimally schedule sensors' activities in
143 order to extend network lifetime in a randomly deployed network. As
144 this problem is subject to a wide range of interpretations, we have chosen
145 to recall the main definitions and assumptions related to our work.
148 %\item Area Coverage: The main objective is to cover an area. The area coverage requires
149 %that the sensing range of working Active nodes cover the whole targeting area, which means any
150 %point in target area can be covered~\cite{Mihaela02,Raymond03}.
152 %\item Target Coverage: The objective is to cover a set of targets. Target coverage means that the discrete target points can be covered in any time. The sensing range of working Active nodes only monitors a finite number of discrete points in targeting area~\cite{Mihaela02,Raymond03}.
154 %\item Barrier Coverage An objective to determine the maximal support/breach paths that traverse a sensor field. Barrier coverage is expressed as finding one or more routes with starting position and ending position when the targets pass through the area deployed with sensor nodes~\cite{Santosh04,Ai05}.
158 The most discussed coverage problems in literature can be classified
159 into two types \cite{ma10}: area coverage (also called full or blanket
160 coverage) and target coverage. An area coverage problem is to find a
161 minimum number of sensors to work, such that each physical point in the
162 area is within the sensing range of at least one working sensor node.
163 Target coverage problem is to cover only a finite number of discrete
164 points called targets. This type of coverage has mainly military
165 applications. Our work will concentrate on the area coverage by design
166 and implementation of a strategy which efficiently selects the active
167 nodes that must maintain both sensing coverage and network
168 connectivity and at the same time improve the lifetime of the wireless
169 sensor network. But requiring that all physical points of the
170 considered region are covered may be too strict, especially where the
171 sensor network is not dense. Our approach represents an area covered
172 by a sensor as a set of primary points and tries to maximize the total
173 number of primary points that are covered in each round, while
174 minimizing overcoverage (points covered by multiple active sensors
179 Various definitions exist for the lifetime of a sensor
180 network~\cite{die09}. The main definitions proposed in the literature are
181 related to the remaining energy of the nodes or to the coverage percentage.
182 The lifetime of the network is mainly defined as the amount
183 of time during which the network can satisfy its coverage objective (the
184 amount of time that the network can cover a given percentage of its
185 area or targets of interest). In this work, we assume that the network
186 is alive until all nodes have been drained of their energy or the
187 sensor network becomes disconnected, and we measure the coverage ratio
188 during the WSN lifetime. Network connectivity is important because an
189 active sensor node without connectivity towards a base station cannot
190 transmit information on an event in the area that it monitors.
192 {\bf Activity scheduling}
194 Activitiy scheduling is to schedule the activation and deactivation of
195 sensor nodes. The basic objective is to decide which sensors are in
196 what states (active or sleeping mode) and for how long, so that the
197 application coverage requirement can be guaranteed and the network
198 lifetime can be prolonged. Various approaches, including centralized,
199 distributed, and localized algorithms, have been proposed for activity
200 scheduling. In distributed algorithms, each node in the network
201 autonomously makes decisions on whether to turn on or turn off itself
202 only using local neighbor information. In centralized algorithms, a
203 central controller (a node or base station) informs every sensors of
204 the time intervals to be activated.
206 {\bf Distributed approaches}
208 Some distributed algorithms have been developed
209 in~\cite{Gallais06,Tian02,Ye03,Zhang05,HeinzelmanCB02} to perform the
210 scheduling. Distributed algorithms typically operate in rounds for
211 a predetermined duration. At the beginning of each round, a sensor
212 exchanges information with its neighbors and makes a decision to either
213 remain turned on or to go to sleep for the round. This decision is
214 basically made on simple greedy criteria like the largest uncovered
215 area \cite{Berman05efficientenergy}, maximum uncovered targets
216 \cite{1240799}. In \cite{Tian02}, the scheduling scheme is divided
217 into rounds, where each round has a self-scheduling phase followed by
218 a sensing phase. Each sensor broadcasts a message containing the node ID
219 and the node location to its neighbors at the beginning of each round. A
220 sensor determines its status by a rule named off-duty eligible rule
221 which tells him to turn off if its sensing area is covered by its
222 neighbors. A back-off scheme is introduced to let each sensor delay
223 the decision process with a random period of time, in order to avoid
224 simultaneous conflicting decisions between nodes and lack of coverage on any area.
225 \cite{Prasad:2007:DAL:1782174.1782218} defines a model for capturing
226 the dependencies between different cover sets and proposes localized
227 heuristic based on this dependency. The algorithm consists of two
228 phases, an initial setup phase during which each sensor computes and
229 prioritizes the covers and a sensing phase during which each sensor
230 first decides its on/off status, and then remains on or off for the
231 rest of the duration. Authors in \cite{chin2007} propose a novel
232 distributed heuristic named Distributed Energy-efficient Scheduling
233 for k-coverage (DESK) so that the energy consumption among all the
234 sensors is balanced, and network lifetime is maximized while the
235 coverage requirement is being maintained. This algorithm works in
236 round, requires only 1-sensing-hop-neighbor information, and a sensor
237 decides its status (active/sleep) based on its perimeter coverage
238 computed through the k-Non-Unit-disk coverage algorithm proposed in
239 \cite{Huang:2003:CPW:941350.941367}.
241 Some other approaches do not consider a synchronized and predetermined
242 period of time where the sensors are active or not. Indeed, each
243 sensor maintains its own timer and its wake-up time is randomized
244 \cite{Ye03} or regulated \cite{cardei05} over time.
245 %A ecrire \cite{Abrams:2004:SKA:984622.984684}p33
247 %The scheduling information is disseminated throughout the network and only sensors in the active state are responsible
248 %for monitoring all targets, while all other nodes are in a low-energy sleep mode. The nodes decide cooperatively which of them will remain in sleep mode for a certain
251 %one way of increasing lifeteime is by turning off redundant nodes to sleep mode to conserve energy while active nodes provide essential coverage, which improves fault tolerance.
253 %In this paper we focus on centralized algorithms because distributed algorithms are outside the scope of our work. Note that centralized coverage algorithms have the advantage of requiring very low processing power from the sensor nodes which have usually limited processing capabilities. Moreover, a recent study conducted in \cite{pc10} concludes that there is a threshold in terms of network size to switch from a localized to a centralized algorithm. Indeed the exchange of messages in large networks may consume a considerable amount of energy in a localized approach compared to a centralized one.
255 {\bf Centralized approaches}
257 Power efficient centralized schemes differ according to several
258 criteria \cite{Cardei:2006:ECP:1646656.1646898}, such as the coverage
259 objective (target coverage or area coverage), the node deployment
260 method (random or deterministic) and the heterogeneity of sensor nodes
261 (common sensing range, common battery lifetime). The major approach is
262 to divide/organize the sensors into a suitable number of set covers
263 where each set completely covers an interest region and to activate
264 these set covers successively.
266 The first algorithms proposed in the literature consider that the cover
267 sets are disjoint: a sensor node appears in exactly one of the
268 generated cover sets. For instance, Slijepcevic and Potkonjak
269 \cite{Slijepcevic01powerefficient} propose an algorithm which
270 allocates sensor nodes in mutually independent sets to monitor an area
271 divided into several fields. Their algorithm builds a cover set by
272 including in priority the sensor nodes which cover critical fields,
273 that is to say fields that are covered by the smallest number of
274 sensors. The time complexity of their heuristic is $O(n^2)$ where $n$
275 is the number of sensors. \cite{cardei02}~describes a graph coloring
276 technique to achieve energy savings by organizing the sensor nodes
277 into a maximum number of disjoint dominating sets which are activated
278 successively. The dominating sets do not guarantee the coverage of the
279 whole region of interest. Abrams et
280 al.~\cite{Abrams:2004:SKA:984622.984684} design three approximation
281 algorithms for a variation of the set k-cover problem, where the
282 objective is to partition the sensors into covers such that the number
283 of covers that includes an area, summed over all areas, is maximized.
284 Their work builds upon previous work
285 in~\cite{Slijepcevic01powerefficient} and the generated cover sets do
286 not provide complete coverage of the monitoring zone.
288 %examine the target coverage problem by disjoint cover sets but relax the requirement that every cover set monitor all the targets and try to maximize the number of times the targets are covered by the partition. They propose various algorithms and establish approximation ratio.
290 In~\cite{Cardei:2005:IWS:1160086.1160098}, the authors propose a
291 heuristic to compute the disjoint set covers (DSC). In order to
292 compute the maximum number of covers, they first transform DSC into a
293 maximum-flow problem, which is then formulated as a mixed integer
294 programming problem (MIP). Based on the solution of the MIP, they
295 design a heuristic to compute the final number of covers. The results
296 show a slight performance improvement in terms of the number of
297 produced DSC in comparison to~\cite{Slijepcevic01powerefficient}, but
298 it incurs higher execution time due to the complexity of the mixed
299 integer programming solving. %Cardei and Du
300 \cite{Cardei:2005:IWS:1160086.1160098} propose a method to efficiently
301 compute the maximum number of disjoint set covers such that each set
302 can monitor all targets. They first transform the problem into a
303 maximum flow problem which is formulated as a mixed integer
304 programming (MIP). Then their heuristic uses the output of the MIP to
305 compute disjoint set covers. Results show that this heuristic
306 provides a number of set covers slightly larger compared to
307 \cite{Slijepcevic01powerefficient} but with a larger execution time
308 due to the complexity of the mixed integer programming resolution.
309 Zorbas et al. \cite{Zorbas2007} present B\{GOP\}, a centralized
310 coverage algorithm introducing sensor candidate categorization
311 depending on their coverage status and the notion of critical target
312 to call targets that are associated with a small number of
313 sensors. The total running time of their heuristic is $0(m n^2)$ where
314 $n$ is the number of sensors, and $m$ the number of targets. Compared
315 to algorithm's results of Slijepcevic and Potkonjak
316 \cite{Slijepcevic01powerefficient}, their heuristic produces more
317 cover sets with a slight growth rate in execution time.
318 %More recently Manju and Pujari\cite{Manju2011}
320 In the case of non-disjoint algorithms \cite{Manju2011}, sensors may
321 participate in more than one cover set. In some cases this may
322 prolong the lifetime of the network in comparison to the disjoint
323 cover set algorithms, but designing algorithms for non-disjoint cover
324 sets generally induces a higher order of complexity. Moreover, in
325 case of a sensor's failure, non-disjoint scheduling policies are less
326 resilient and less reliable because a sensor may be involved in more
327 than one cover sets. For instance, Cardei et al.~\cite{cardei05bis}
328 present a linear programming (LP) solution and a greedy approach to
329 extend the sensor network lifetime by organizing the sensors into a
330 maximal number of non-disjoint cover sets. Simulation results show
331 that by allowing sensors to participate in multiple sets, the network
332 lifetime increases compared with related
333 work~\cite{Cardei:2005:IWS:1160086.1160098}. In~\cite{berman04}, the
334 authors have formulated the lifetime problem and suggested another
335 (LP) technique to solve this problem. A centralized solution based on the Garg-K\"{o}nemann
336 algorithm~\cite{garg98}, probably near
337 the optimal solution, is also proposed.
339 {\bf Our contribution}
341 There are three main questions which should be addressed to build a
342 scheduling strategy. We give a brief answer to these three questions
343 to describe our approach before going into details in the subsequent
346 \item {\bf How must the phases for information exchange, decision and
347 sensing be planned over time?} Our algorithm divides the time line
348 into a number of rounds. Each round contains 4 phases: Information
349 Exchange, Leader Election, Decision, and Sensing.
351 \item {\bf What are the rules to decide which node has to be turned on
352 or off?} Our algorithm tends to limit the overcoverage of points of
353 interest to avoid turning on too many sensors covering the same
354 areas at the same time, and tries to prevent undercoverage. The
355 decision is a good compromise between these two conflicting
358 \item {\bf Which node should make such a decision?} As mentioned in
359 \cite{pc10}, both centralized and distributed algorithms have their
360 own advantages and disadvantages. Centralized coverage algorithms
361 have the advantage of requiring very low processing power from the
362 sensor nodes which have usually limited processing capabilities.
363 Distributed algorithms are very adaptable to the dynamic and
364 scalable nature of sensors network. Authors in \cite{pc10} conclude
365 that there is a threshold in terms of network size to switch from a
366 localized to a centralized algorithm. Indeed the exchange of
367 messages in large networks may consume a considerable amount of
368 energy in a localized approach compared to a centralized one. Our
369 work does not consider only one leader to compute and to broadcast
370 the scheduling decision to all the sensors. When the network size
371 increases, the network is divided into many subregions and the
372 decision is made by a leader in each subregion.
375 \section{Activity scheduling}
378 We consider a randomly and uniformly deployed network consisting of
379 static wireless sensors. The wireless sensors are deployed in high
380 density to ensure initially a full coverage of the interested area. We
381 assume that all nodes are homogeneous in terms of communication and
382 processing capabilities and heterogeneous in term of energy provision.
383 The location information is available to the sensor node either
384 through hardware such as embedded GPS or through location discovery
385 algorithms. The area of interest can be divided using the
386 divide-and-conquer strategy into smaller areas called subregions and
387 then our coverage protocol will be implemented in each subregion
388 simultaneously. Our protocol works in rounds fashion as shown in
391 %Given the interested Area $A$, the wireless sensor nodes set $S=\lbrace s_1,\ldots,s_N \rbrace $ that are deployed randomly and uniformly in this area such that they are ensure a full coverage for A. The Area A is divided into regions $A=\lbrace A^1,\ldots,A^k,\ldots, A^{N_R} \rbrace$. We suppose that each sensor node $s_i$ know its location and its region. We will have a subset $SSET^k =\lbrace s_1,...,s_j,...,s_{N^k} \rbrace $ , where $s_N = s_{N^1} + s_{N^2} +,\ldots,+ s_{N^k} +,\ldots,+s_{N^R}$. Each sensor node $s_i$ has the same initial energy $IE_i$ in the first time and the current residual energy $RE_i$ equal to $IE_i$ in the first time for each $s_i$ in A. \\
395 \includegraphics[width=85mm]{FirstModel.eps} % 70mm
396 \caption{Multi-round coverage protocol}
400 Each round is divided into 4 phases : Information (INFO) Exchange,
401 Leader Election, Decision, and Sensing. For each round there is
402 exactly one set cover responsible for the sensing task. This protocol is
403 more reliable against an unexpected node failure because it works
404 in rounds. On the one hand, if a node failure is detected before
405 making the decision, the node will not participate to this phase, and,
406 on the other hand, if the node failure occurs after the decision, the
407 sensing task of the network will be temporarily affected: only during
408 the period of sensing until a new round starts, since a new set cover
409 will take charge of the sensing task in the next round. The energy
410 consumption and some other constraints can easily be taken into
411 account since the sensors can update and then exchange their
412 information (including their residual energy) at the beginning of each
413 round. However, the pre-sensing phases (INFO Exchange, Leader
414 Election, Decision) are energy consuming for some nodes, even when
415 they do not join the network to monitor the area. Below, we describe
416 each phase in more details.
418 \subsection{Information exchange phase}
420 Each sensor node $j$ sends its position, remaining energy $RE_j$, and
421 the number of local neighbors $NBR_j$ to all wireless sensor nodes in
422 its subregion by using an INFO packet and then listens to the packets
423 sent from other nodes. After that, each node will have information
424 about all the sensor nodes in the subregion. In our model, the
425 remaining energy corresponds to the time that a sensor can live in the
428 %\subsection{\textbf Working Phase:}
430 %The working phase works in rounding fashion. Each round include 3 steps described as follow :
432 \subsection{Leader election phase}
433 This step includes choosing the Wireless Sensor Node Leader (WSNL)
434 which will be responsible for executing the coverage algorithm. Each
435 subregion in the area of interest will select its own WSNL
436 independently for each round. All the sensor nodes cooperate to
437 select WSNL. The nodes in the same subregion will select the leader
438 based on the received information from all other nodes in the same
439 subregion. The selection criteria in order of priority are: larger
440 number of neighbors, larger remaining energy, and then in case of
441 equality, larger index.
443 \subsection{Decision phase}
444 The WSNL will solve an integer program (see section~\ref{cp}) to
445 select which sensors will be activated in the following sensing phase
446 to cover the subregion. WSNL will send Active-Sleep packet to each
447 sensor in the subregion based on the algorithm's results.
448 %The main goal in this step after choosing the WSNL is to produce the best representative active nodes set that will take the responsibility of covering the whole region $A^k$ with minimum number of sensor nodes to prolong the lifetime in the wireless sensor network. For our problem, in each round we need to select the minimum set of sensor nodes to improve the lifetime of the network and in the same time taking into account covering the region $A^k$ . We need an optimal solution with tradeoff between our two conflicting objectives.
449 %The above region coverage problem can be formulated as a Multi-objective optimization problem and we can use the Binary Particle Swarm Optimization technique to solve it.
451 \subsection{Sensing phase}
452 Active sensors in the round will execute their sensing task to
453 preserve maximal coverage in the region of interest. We will assume
454 that the cost of keeping a node awake (or asleep) for sensing task is
455 the same for all wireless sensor nodes in the network. Each sensor
456 will receive an Active-Sleep packet from WSNL informing it to stay
457 awake or to go to sleep for a time equal to the period of sensing until
458 starting a new round.
460 %\subsection{Sensing coverage model}
463 %\noindent We try to produce an adaptive scheduling which allows sensors to operate alternatively so as to prolong the network lifetime. For convenience, the notations and assumptions are described first.
464 %The wireless sensor node use the binary disk sensing model by which each sensor node will has a certain sensing range is reserved within a circular disk called radius $R_s$.
465 \noindent We consider a boolean disk coverage model which is the most
466 widely used sensor coverage model in the literature. Each sensor has a
467 constant sensing range $R_s$. All space points within a disk centered
468 at the sensor with the radius of the sensing range is said to be
469 covered by this sensor. We also assume that the communication range is
470 at least twice the size of the sensing range. In fact, Zhang and
471 Zhou~\cite{Zhang05} proved that if the transmission range fulfills the
472 previous hypothesis, a complete coverage of a convex area implies
473 connectivity among the working nodes in the active mode.
474 %To calculate the coverage ratio for the area of interest, we can propose the following coverage model which is called Wireless Sensor Node Area Coverage Model to ensure that all the area within each node sensing range are covered. We can calculate the positions of the points in the circle disc of the sensing range of wireless sensor node based on the Unit Circle in figure~\ref{fig:cluster1}:
479 %%\includegraphics[scale=0.25]{fig1.pdf}\\ %& \includegraphics[scale=0.10]{1.pdf} \\
480 %%(A) Figure 1 & (B) Figure 2
482 %\caption{Unit Circle in radians. }
483 %\label{fig:cluster1}
486 %By using the Unit Circle in figure~\ref{fig:cluster1},
487 %We choose to representEach wireless sensor node will be represented into a selected number of primary points by which we can know if the sensor node is covered or not.
488 % Figure ~\ref{fig:cluster2} shows the selected primary points that represents the area of the sensor node and according to the sensing range of the wireless sensor node.
490 \noindent Instead of working with the coverage area, we consider for each
491 sensor a set of points called primary points. We also assume that the
492 sensing disk defined by a sensor is covered if all the primary points of
493 this sensor are covered.
497 %%\includegraphics[scale=0.25]{fig2.pdf}\\ %& \includegraphics[scale=0.10]{1.pdf} \\
498 %%(A) Figure 1 & (B) Figure 2
500 %\caption{Wireless Sensor Node Area Coverage Model.}
501 %\label{fig:cluster2}
503 By knowing the position (point center: ($p_x,p_y$)) of a wireless
504 sensor node and its $R_s$, we calculate the primary points directly
505 based on the proposed model. We use these primary points (that can be
506 increased or decreased if necessary) as references to ensure that the
507 monitored region of interest is covered by the selected set of
508 sensors, instead of using all the points in the area.
510 \noindent We can calculate the positions of the selected primary
511 points in the circle disk of the sensing range of a wireless sensor
512 node (see figure~\ref{fig2}) as follows:\\
513 $(p_x,p_y)$ = point center of wireless sensor node\\
515 $X_2=( p_x + R_s * (1), p_y + R_s * (0) )$\\
516 $X_3=( p_x + R_s * (-1), p_y + R_s * (0)) $\\
517 $X_4=( p_x + R_s * (0), p_y + R_s * (1) )$\\
518 $X_5=( p_x + R_s * (0), p_y + R_s * (-1 )) $\\
519 $X_6= ( p_x + R_s * (\frac{-\sqrt{2}}{2}), p_y + R_s * (0)) $\\
520 $X_7=( p_x + R_s * (\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}), p_y + R_s * (0))$\\
521 $X_8=( p_x + R_s * (\frac{-\sqrt{2}}{2}), p_y + R_s * (\frac{-\sqrt{2}}{2})) $\\
522 $X_9=( p_x + R_s * (\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}), p_y + R_s * (\frac{-\sqrt{2}}{2})) $\\
523 $X_{10}=( p_x + R_s * (\frac{-\sqrt{2}}{2}), p_y + R_s * (\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2})) $\\
524 $X_{11}=( p_x + R_s * (\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}), p_y + R_s * (\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2})) $\\
525 $X_{12}=( p_x + R_s * (0), p_y + R_s * (\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2})) $\\
526 $X_{13}=( p_x + R_s * (0), p_y + R_s * (\frac{-\sqrt{2}}{2})) $.
530 % \begin{multicols}{6}
532 %\includegraphics[scale=0.10]{fig21.pdf}\\~ ~ ~(a)
533 %\includegraphics[scale=0.10]{fig22.pdf}\\~ ~ ~(b)
534 \includegraphics[scale=0.25]{principles13.eps}
535 %\includegraphics[scale=0.10]{fig25.pdf}\\~ ~ ~(d)
536 %\includegraphics[scale=0.10]{fig26.pdf}\\~ ~ ~(e)
537 %\includegraphics[scale=0.10]{fig27.pdf}\\~ ~ ~(f)
539 \caption{Wireless sensor node represented by 13 primary points}
543 \section{Coverage problem formulation}
545 %We can formulate our optimization problem as energy cost minimization by minimize the number of active sensor nodes and maximizing the coverage rate at the same time in each $A^k$ . This optimization problem can be formulated as follow: Since that we use a homogeneous wireless sensor network, we will assume that the cost of keeping a node awake is the same for all wireless sensor nodes in the network. We can define the decision parameter $X_j$ as in \eqref{eq11}:\\
548 %To satisfy the coverage requirement, the set of the principal points that will represent all the sensor nodes in the monitored region as $PSET= \lbrace P_1,\ldots ,P_p, \ldots , P_{N_P^k} \rbrace $, where $N_P^k = N_{sp} * N^k $ and according to the proposed model in figure ~\ref{fig:cluster2}. These points can be used by the wireless sensor node leader which will be chosen in each region in A to build a new parameter $\alpha_{jp}$ that represents the coverage possibility for each principal point $P_p$ of each wireless sensor node $s_j$ in $A^k$ as in \eqref{eq12}:\\
550 \noindent Our model is based on the model proposed by
551 \cite{pedraza2006} where the objective is to find a maximum number of
552 disjoint cover sets. To accomplish this goal, authors proposed an
553 integer program which forces undercoverage and overcoverage of targets
554 to become minimal at the same time. They use binary variables
555 $x_{jl}$ to indicate if sensor $j$ belongs to cover set $l$. In our
556 model, we consider binary variables $X_{j}$ which determine the
557 activation of sensor $j$ in the sensing phase of the round. We also
558 consider primary points as targets. The set of primary points is
559 denoted by $P$ and the set of sensors by $J$.
561 \noindent For a primary point $p$, let $\alpha_{jp}$ denote the
562 indicator function of whether the point $p$ is covered, that is:
564 \alpha_{jp} = \left \{
566 1 & \mbox{if the primary point $p$ is covered} \\
567 & \mbox{by sensor node $j$}, \\
568 0 & \mbox{otherwise.}\\
572 The number of active sensors that cover the primary point $p$ is equal
573 to $\sum_{j \in J} \alpha_{jp} * X_{j}$ where:
577 1& \mbox{if sensor $j$ is active,} \\
578 0 & \mbox{otherwise.}\\
582 We define the Overcoverage variable $\Theta_{p}$ as:
584 \Theta_{p} = \left \{
586 0 & \mbox{if the primary point}\\
587 & \mbox{$p$ is not covered,}\\
588 \left( \sum_{j \in J} \alpha_{jp} * X_{j} \right)- 1 & \mbox{otherwise.}\\
592 \noindent More precisely, $\Theta_{p}$ represents the number of active
593 sensor nodes minus one that cover the primary point $p$.\\
594 The Undercoverage variable $U_{p}$ of the primary point $p$ is defined
599 1 &\mbox{if the primary point $p$ is not covered,} \\
600 0 & \mbox{otherwise.}\\
605 \noindent Our coverage optimization problem can then be formulated as follows\\
606 \begin{equation} \label{eq:ip2r}
609 \min \sum_{p \in P} (w_{\theta} \Theta_{p} + w_{U} U_{p})&\\
610 \textrm{subject to :}&\\
611 \sum_{j \in J} \alpha_{jp} X_{j} - \Theta_{p}+ U_{p} =1, &\forall p \in P\\
613 %\sum_{t \in T} X_{j,t} \leq \frac{RE_j}{e_t} &\forall j \in J \\
615 \Theta_{p}\in \mathbb{N} , &\forall p \in P\\
616 U_{p} \in \{0,1\}, &\forall p \in P \\
617 X_{j} \in \{0,1\}, &\forall j \in J
622 \item $X_{j}$ : indicates whether or not the sensor $j$ is actively
623 sensing in the round (1 if yes and 0 if not);
624 \item $\Theta_{p}$ : {\it overcoverage}, the number of sensors minus
625 one that are covering the primary point $p$;
626 \item $U_{p}$ : {\it undercoverage}, indicates whether or not the principal point
627 $p$ is being covered (1 if not covered and 0 if covered).
630 The first group of constraints indicates that some primary point $p$
631 should be covered by at least one sensor and, if it is not always the
632 case, overcoverage and undercoverage variables help balancing the
633 restriction equations by taking positive values. There are two main
634 objectives. First we limit the overcoverage of primary points in order to
635 activate a minimum number of sensors. Second we prevent the absence of monitoring on
636 some parts of the subregion by minimizing the undercoverage. The
637 weights $w_\theta$ and $w_U$ must be properly chosen so as to
638 guarantee that the maximum number of points are covered during each
641 %In equation \eqref{eq15}, there are two main objectives: the first one using the Overcoverage parameter to minimize the number of active sensor nodes in the produced final solution vector $X$ which leads to improve the life time of wireless sensor network. The second goal by using the Undercoverage parameter to maximize the coverage in the region by means of covering each primary point in $SSET^k$.The two objectives are achieved at the same time. The constraint which represented in equation \eqref{eq16} refer to the coverage function for each primary point $P_p$ in $SSET^k$ , where each $P_p$ should be covered by
642 %at least one sensor node in $A^k$. The objective function in \eqref{eq15} involving two main objectives to be optimized simultaneously, where optimal decisions need to be taken in the presence of trade-offs between the two conflicting main objectives in \eqref{eq15} and this refer to that our coverage optimization problem is a multi-objective optimization problem and we can use the BPSO to solve it. The concept of Overcoverage and Undercoverage inspired from ~\cite{Fernan12} but we use it with our model as stated in subsection \ref{Sensing Coverage Model} with some modification to be applied later by BPSO.
643 %\subsection{Notations and assumptions}
646 %\item $m$ : the number of targets
647 %\item $n$ : the number of sensors
648 %\item $K$ : maximal number of cover sets
649 %\item $i$ : index of target ($i=1..m$)
650 %\item $j$ : index of sensor ($j=1..n$)
651 %\item $k$ : index of cover set ($k=1..K$)
652 %\item $T_0$ : initial set of targets
653 %\item $S_0$ : initial set of sensors
654 %\item $T $ : set of targets which are not covered by at least one cover set
655 %\item $S$ : set of available sensors
656 %\item $S_0(i)$ : set of sensors which cover the target $i$
657 %\item $T_0(j)$ : set of targets covered by sensor $j$
658 %\item $C_k$ : cover set of index $k$
659 %\item $T(C_k)$ : set of targets covered by the cover set $k$
660 %\item $NS(i)$ : set of available sensors which cover the target $i$
661 %\item $NC(i)$ : set of cover sets which do not cover the target $i$
662 %\item $|.|$ : cardinality of the set
666 \section{Simulation results}
669 In this section, we conducted a series of simulations to evaluate the
670 efficiency and the relevance of our approach, using the discrete event
671 simulator OMNeT++ \cite{varga}. We performed simulations for five
672 different densities varying from 50 to 250~nodes. Experimental results
673 were obtained from randomly generated networks in which nodes are
674 deployed over a $(50 \times 25)~m^2 $ sensing field.
675 More precisely, the deployment is controlled at a coarse scale in
676 order to ensure that the deployed nodes can fully cover the sensing
677 field with the given sensing range.
678 10~simulation runs are performed with
679 different network topologies for each node density. The results
680 presented hereafter are the average of these 10 runs. A simulation
681 ends when all the nodes are dead or the sensor network becomes
682 disconnected (some nodes may not be able to send, to a base station, an
685 Our proposed coverage protocol uses the radio energy dissipation model
686 defined by~\cite{HeinzelmanCB02} as energy consumption model for each
687 wireless sensor node when transmitting or receiving packets. The
688 energy of each node in a network is initialized randomly within the
689 range 24-60~joules, and each sensor node will consume 0.2 watts during
690 the sensing period which will last 60 seconds. Thus, an
691 active node will consume 12~joules during the sensing phase, while a
692 sleeping node will use 0.002 joules. Each sensor node will not
693 participate in the next round if its remaining energy is less than 12
694 joules. In all experiments the parameters are set as follows:
695 $R_s=5m$, $w_{\Theta}=1$, and $w_{U}=|P^2|$.
697 We evaluate the efficiency of our approach by using some performance
698 metrics such as: coverage ratio, number of active nodes ratio, energy
699 saving ratio, energy consumption, network lifetime, execution time,
700 and number of stopped simulation runs. Our approach called strategy~2
701 (with two leaders) works with two subregions, each one having a size
702 of $(25 \times 25)~m^2$. Our strategy will be compared with two other
703 approaches. The first one, called strategy~1 (with one leader), works
704 as strategy~2, but considers only one region of $(50 \times 25)$ $m^2$
705 with only one leader. The other approach, called Simple Heuristic,
706 consists in uniformly dividing the region into squares of $(5 \times
707 5)~m^2$. During the decision phase, in each square, a sensor is
708 randomly chosen, it will remain turned on for the coming sensing
711 \subsection{The impact of the number of rounds on the coverage ratio}
713 In this experiment, the coverage ratio measures how much the area of a
714 sensor field is covered. In our case, the coverage ratio is regarded
715 as the number of primary points covered among the set of all primary
716 points within the field. Figure~\ref{fig3} shows the impact of the
717 number of rounds on the average coverage ratio for 150 deployed nodes
718 for the three approaches. It can be seen that the three approaches
719 give similar coverage ratios during the first rounds. From the
720 9th~round the coverage ratio decreases continuously with the simple
721 heuristic, while the two other strategies provide superior coverage to
722 $90\%$ for five more rounds. Coverage ratio decreases when the number
723 of rounds increases due to dead nodes. Although some nodes are dead,
724 thanks to strategy~1 or~2, other nodes are preserved to ensure the
725 coverage. Moreover, when we have a dense sensor network, it leads to
726 maintain the full coverage for a larger number of rounds. Strategy~2 is
727 slightly more efficient than strategy 1, because strategy~2 subdivides
728 the region into 2~subregions and if one of the two subregions becomes
729 disconnected, the coverage may be still ensured in the remaining
735 \includegraphics[scale=0.55]{TheCoverageRatio150.eps} %\\~ ~ ~(a)
736 \caption{The impact of the number of rounds on the coverage ratio for 150 deployed nodes}
740 \subsection{The impact of the number of rounds on the active sensors ratio}
742 It is important to have as few active nodes as possible in each round,
743 in order to minimize the communication overhead and maximize the
744 network lifetime. This point is assessed through the Active Sensors
745 Ratio, which is defined as follows:
748 \mbox{ASR}(\%) = \frac{\mbox{Number of active sensors
749 during the current sensing phase}}{\mbox{Total number of sensors in the network
750 for the region}} \times 100.
752 Figure~\ref{fig4} shows the average active nodes ratio versus rounds
753 for 150 deployed nodes.
757 \includegraphics[scale=0.55]{TheActiveSensorRatio150.eps} %\\~ ~ ~(a)
758 \caption{The impact of the number of rounds on the active sensors ratio for 150 deployed nodes }
762 The results presented in figure~\ref{fig4} show the superiority of
763 both proposed strategies, the strategy with two leaders and the one
764 with a single leader, in comparison with the simple heuristic. The
765 strategy with one leader uses less active nodes than the strategy with
766 two leaders until the last rounds, because it uses central control on
767 the whole sensing field. The advantage of the strategy~2 approach is
768 that even if a network is disconnected in one subregion, the other one
769 usually continues the optimization process, and this extends the
770 lifetime of the network.
772 \subsection{The impact of the number of rounds on the energy saving ratio}
774 In this experiment, we consider a performance metric linked to energy.
775 This metric, called Energy Saving Ratio, is defined by:
778 \mbox{ESR}(\%) = \frac{\mbox{Number of alive sensors during this round}}
779 {\mbox{Total number of sensors in the network for the region}} \times 100.
781 The longer the ratio is, the more redundant sensor nodes are
782 switched off, and consequently the longer the network may live.
783 Figure~\ref{fig5} shows the average Energy Saving Ratio versus rounds
784 for all three approaches and for 150 deployed nodes.
788 % \begin{multicols}{6}
790 \includegraphics[scale=0.55]{TheEnergySavingRatio150.eps} %\\~ ~ ~(a)
791 \caption{The impact of the number of rounds on the energy saving ratio for 150 deployed nodes}
795 The simulation results show that our strategies allow to efficiently
796 save energy by turning off some sensors during the sensing phase. As
797 expected, the strategy with one leader is usually slightly better than
798 the second strategy, because the global optimization permits to turn
799 off more sensors. Indeed, when there are two subregions more nodes
800 remain awake near the border shared by them. Note that again as the
801 number of rounds increases the two leaders' strategy becomes the most
802 performing one, since it takes longer to have the two subregion networks
803 simultaneously disconnected.
805 \subsection{The number of stopped simulation runs}
807 We will now study the number of simulations which stopped due to
808 network disconnections per round for each of the three approaches.
809 Figure~\ref{fig6} illustrates the average number of stopped simulation
810 runs per round for 150 deployed nodes. It can be observed that the
811 simple heuristic is the approach which stops first because the nodes
812 are randomly chosen. Among the two proposed strategies, the
813 centralized one first exhibits network disconnections. Thus, as
814 explained previously, in case of the strategy with several subregions
815 the optimization effectively continues as long as a network in a
816 subregion is still connected. This longer partial coverage
817 optimization participates in extending the network lifetime.
821 \includegraphics[scale=0.55]{TheNumberofStoppedSimulationRuns150.eps}
822 \caption{The number of stopped simulation runs compared to the number of rounds for 150 deployed nodes }
826 \subsection{The energy consumption}
828 In this experiment, we study the effect of the multi-hop communication
829 protocol on the performance of the strategy with two leaders and
830 compare it with the other two approaches. The average energy
831 consumption resulting from wireless communications is calculated
832 by taking into account the energy spent by all the nodes when transmitting and
833 receiving packets during the network lifetime. This average value,
834 which is obtained for 10~simulation runs, is then divided by the
835 average number of rounds to define a metric allowing a fair comparison
836 between networks having different densities.
838 Figure~\ref{fig7} illustrates the Energy Consumption for the different
839 network sizes and the three approaches. The results show that the
840 strategy with two leaders is the most competitive from the energy
841 consumption point of view. A centralized method, like the strategy
842 with one leader, has a high energy consumption due to many
843 communications. In fact, a distributed method greatly reduces the
844 number of communications thanks to the partitioning of the initial
845 network in several independent subnetworks. Let us notice that even if
846 a centralized method consumes far more energy than the simple
847 heuristic, since the energy cost of communications during a round is a
848 small part of the energy spent in the sensing phase, the
849 communications have a small impact on the network lifetime.
853 \includegraphics[scale=0.55]{TheEnergyConsumption.eps}
854 \caption{The energy consumption}
858 \subsection{The impact of the number of sensors on execution time}
860 A sensor node has limited energy resources and computing power,
861 therefore it is important that the proposed algorithm has the shortest
862 possible execution time. The energy of a sensor node must be mainly
863 used for the sensing phase, not for the pre-sensing ones.
864 Table~\ref{table1} gives the average execution times in seconds
865 on a laptop of the decision phase (solving of the optimization problem)
866 during one round. They are given for the different approaches and
867 various numbers of sensors. The lack of any optimization explains why
868 the heuristic has very low execution times. Conversely, the strategy
869 with one leader which requires to solve an optimization problem
870 considering all the nodes presents redhibitory execution times.
871 Moreover, increasing the network size by 50~nodes multiplies the time
872 by almost a factor of 10. The strategy with two leaders has more
873 suitable times. We think that in distributed fashion the solving of
874 the optimization problem in a subregion can be tackled by sensor
875 nodes. Overall, to be able to deal with very large networks, a
876 distributed method is clearly required.
879 \caption{The execution time(s) vs the number of sensors}
883 % used for centering table
884 \begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|c|}
885 % centered columns (4 columns)
887 %inserts double horizontal lines
888 Sensors number & Strategy~2 & Strategy~1 & Simple heuristic \\ [0.5ex]
889 & (with two leaders) & (with one leader) & \\ [0.5ex]
890 %Case & Strategy (with Two Leaders) & Strategy (with One Leader) & Simple Heuristic \\ [0.5ex]
894 % inserts single horizontal line
895 50 & 0.097 & 0.189 & 0.001 \\
896 % inserting body of the table
898 100 & 0.419 & 1.972 & 0.0032 \\
900 150 & 1.295 & 13.098 & 0.0032 \\
902 200 & 4.54 & 169.469 & 0.0046 \\
904 250 & 12.252 & 1581.163 & 0.0056 \\
905 % [1ex] adds vertical space
910 % is used to refer this table in the text
913 \subsection{The network lifetime}
915 Finally, we have defined the network lifetime as the time until all
916 nodes have been drained of their energy or each sensor network
917 monitoring an area has become disconnected. In figure~\ref{fig8}, the
918 network lifetime for different network sizes and for both strategy
919 with two leaders and the simple heuristic is illustrated.
920 We do not consider anymore the centralized strategy with one
921 leader, because, as shown above, this strategy results in execution
922 times that quickly become unsuitable for a sensor network.
926 % \begin{multicols}{6}
928 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{TheNetworkLifetime.eps} %\\~ ~ ~(a)
929 \caption{The network lifetime }
933 As highlighted by figure~\ref{fig8}, the network lifetime obviously
934 increases when the size of the network increases, with our approach
935 that leads to the larger lifetime improvement. By choosing the best
936 suited nodes, for each round, to cover the region of interest and by
937 letting the other ones sleep in order to be used later in next rounds,
938 our strategy efficiently prolonges the network lifetime. Comparison shows that
939 the larger the sensor number is, the more our strategies outperform
940 the simple heuristic. Strategy~2, which uses two leaders, is the best
941 one because it is robust to network disconnection in one subregion. It
942 also means that distributing the algorithm in each node and
943 subdividing the sensing field into many subregions, which are managed
944 independently and simultaneously, is the most relevant way to maximize
945 the lifetime of a network.
947 \section{Conclusion and Future Works}
948 \label{sec:conclusion}
950 In this paper, we have addressed the problem of the coverage and the lifetime
951 optimization in wireless sensor networks. This is a key issue as
952 sensor nodes have limited resources in terms of memory, energy and
953 computational power. To cope with this problem, the field of sensing
954 is divided into smaller subregions using the concept of
955 divide-and-conquer method, and then a multi-rounds coverage protocol
956 will optimize coverage and lifetime performances in each subregion.
957 The proposed protocol combines two efficient techniques: network
958 leader election and sensor activity scheduling, where the challenges
959 include how to select the most efficient leader in each subregion and
960 the best representative active nodes that will optimize the network lifetime
961 while taking the responsibility of covering the corresponding
962 subregion. The network lifetime in each subregion is divided into
963 rounds, each round consists of four phases: (i) Information Exchange,
964 (ii) Leader Election, (iii) an optimization-based Decision in order to
965 select the nodes remaining active for the last phase, and (iv)
966 Sensing. The simulations show the relevance of the proposed
967 protocol in terms of lifetime, coverage ratio, active sensors ratio,
968 energy saving, energy consumption, execution time, and the number of
969 stopped simulation runs due to network disconnection. Indeed, when
970 dealing with large and dense wireless sensor networks, a distributed
971 approach like the one we propose allows to reduce the difficulty of a
972 single global optimization problem by partitioning it in many smaller
973 problems, one per subregion, that can be solved more easily.
975 In future work, we plan to study and propose a coverage protocol which
976 computes all active sensor schedules in a single round, using
977 optimization methods such as swarms optimization or evolutionary
978 algorithms. This single round will still consists of 4 phases, but the
979 decision phase will compute the schedules for several sensing phases
980 which, aggregated together, define a kind of meta-sensing phase.
981 The computation of all cover sets in one round is far more
982 difficult, but will reduce the communication overhead.
984 % use section* for acknowledgement
985 %\section*{Acknowledgment}
987 \bibliographystyle{IEEEtran}
988 \bibliography{bare_conf}