
Saturation Throughput and Delay Performance Evaluation of the IEEE 802.11g/n for a Wireless Lossy Channel
Author(s) -
Salah Abdulghani Alabady
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
iraqi journal for electrical and electronic engineering/al-maǧallaẗ al-ʻirāqiyyaẗ al-handasaẗ al-kahrabāʼiyyaẗ wa-al-ilikttrūniyyaẗ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2078-6069
pISSN - 1814-5892
DOI - 10.37917/ijeee.14.1.6
Subject(s) - computer science , computer network , distributed coordination function , network packet , ieee 802.11 , network allocation vector , throughput , wireless network , channel (broadcasting) , acknowledgement , media access control , transmission delay , wireless , real time computing , telecommunications
Non-ideal channel conditions degrade the performance of wireless networks due to the occurrence of frame errors. Most of the well-known works compute the saturation throughput and packet delay for the IEEE 802.11 Distributed Coordination Function (DCF) protocol with the assumption that transmission is carried out via an ideal channel (i.e., no channel bit errors or hidden stations), and/or the errors exist only in data packets. Besides, there are no considerations for transmission errors in the control frames (i.e., Request to Send (RTS), Clear to Send (CTS), and Acknowledgement (ACK)). Considering the transmission errors in the control frames adds complexity to the existing analysis for the wireless networks. In this paper, an analytical model to evaluate the Medium Access Control (MAC) layer saturation throughput and packet delay of the IEEE 802.11g and IEEE 802.11n protocols in the presence of both collisions and transmission errors in a non-ideal wireless channel is provided. The derived analytical expressions reveal that the saturation throughput and packet delay are affected by the network size (n), packet size, minimum backoff window size (Wmin), maximum backoff stage (m), and bit error rate (BER). These results are important for protocol optimization and network planning in wireless networks.