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An Efficient Energy Management Routing and Scalable Topology in Wireless Sensor Network Using Virtual Backbone
Author(s) -
Alanazi Rayan,
Ahmed I. Taloba,
Nadir O. Hamed,
H. Y. Zahran,
Emad E. Mahmoud
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
wireless communications and mobile computing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.42
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1530-8677
pISSN - 1530-8669
DOI - 10.1155/2022/9327318
Subject(s) - computer science , computer network , backbone network , wireless sensor network , distributed computing , scalability , geographic routing , node (physics) , routing protocol , routing (electronic design automation) , efficient energy use , topology (electrical circuits) , static routing , electrical engineering , engineering , structural engineering , database
The wireless sensor network (WSN) approach is one of the fastest growing approaches in the world of communications and engineering. The primary objective of a WSN is to discover the important information about the environment, depending on the nature of the applications under which it is implemented, and to communicate this information to a single base station (BS) so that appropriate measures can be taken. These sensor nodes communicate via a variety of protocols. The difficulty with the traditional system is that while collecting the observed data, each node transmits its felt information directly to a base station, which quickly exhausts its power. This study suggests a Backbone Energy-Efficient Sleeping (BEES) management strategy with two appealing features: (i) the capacity of backbone is scalable by basic parameters, and (ii) the backbone nodes were distributed equally, implying that the backbone on its own is energy efficient during routine activities. Reliable connections are expected to obtain QoS and routing protocols of such backbone nodes in wireless multihop systems. As a result, present localized routing in virtualized backbone schedule cannot ensure energy-efficient paths. An energy-efficient routing scheme for Virtual Back Bone Nodes (VBS) increases life of node and switches off its radio while in sleep state to spend less power. BEES’ performance is evaluated by comparing it to two different topology management techniques. The results show that BEES performs better algorithms. It ensures optimal routing with minimal node power consumption but also implements the essential communication range for backbone networks.

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