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Improving Energy Efficient Clustering Method for Wireless Sensor Network
Author(s) -
Md. Imran Hossain,
Md. Mahbubur Rahman,
Tapan Kumar Godder,
Mst. Titasa Khatun
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
international journal of information technology and computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2074-9015
pISSN - 2074-9007
DOI - 10.5815/ijitcs.2013.09.07
Subject(s) - computer science , wireless sensor network , topology control , computer network , base station , cluster analysis , energy consumption , node (physics) , network topology , efficient energy use , topology (electrical circuits) , energy (signal processing) , key distribution in wireless sensor networks , distributed computing , wireless network , wireless , telecommunications , statistics , mathematics , ecology , electrical engineering , structural engineering , combinatorics , machine learning , engineering , biology
Wireless sensor networks have recently emerged as important computing platform. These sensors are power-limited and have limited computing resources. Therefore the sensor energy has to be managed wisely in order to maximize the lifetime of the network. Simply speaking, LEACH requires the knowledge of energy for every node in the network topology used. In LEACHs threshold which selects the cluster head is fixed so this protocol does not consider network topology environments. We proposed IELP algorithm, which selects cluster heads using different thresholds. New cluster head selection probability consists of the initial energy and the number of neighbor nodes. On rotation basis, a head-set member receives data from the neighboring nodes and transmits the aggregated results to the distant base station. For a given number of data collecting sensor nodes, the number of control and management nodes can be systematically adjusted to reduce the energy consumption, which increases the network life.The simulation results show that the performance of IELP has an improvement of 39% over LEACH and 20% over SEP in the area of 100m*100m for m=0.1, α =2 where advanced nodes (m) and the additional energy factor between advanced and normal nodes (α)

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