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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS AND ENHANCEMENT OF MAC PROTOCOLS FOR IEEE 802.11 WLANS

CHEN, YUNLI January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
12

Gestion des messages de sécurité dans les réseaux VANET. / Handling Safety Messages in Vehicular Ad-HocNetworks (VANETs)

Bouchaala, Younes 21 December 2017 (has links)
Les exigences de Qualité de Service (QoS) des applications VANET varient selon la nature et le type de l’application. Par conséquent, un protocole de communication VANET doit pouvoir répondre aux diverses exigences de QoS selon le type du trafic. Dans VANET, le canal de transmission est partagé par tous les véhicules en utilisant une même fréquence radio. Une mauvaise exploitation du canal peut donc conduire à des collisions et peut aussi engendrer un gaspillage de la bande passante. Un protocole MAC doit être alors conçu pour partager le canal entre les différents noeuds d’une manière efficace et équitable.Dans cette thèse nous présentons les contributions suivantes :1- Analyse et amélioration de la diffusion dans la norme IEEE 802.11.2- Optimisation de la technique CSMA pour des réseaux 1D et 2D.3- Développement d’un algorithme CSMA de transmission adaptatif qui met à jour le taux de détection de la porteuse en fonction d’une valeur de référence.4- Étude du gain obtenu par l’utilisation d’antennes directionnelles pour Aloha, Aloha non-slotté, et CSMA. / Quality of Service (QoS) requirements for VANET applications vary depending on the nature and type of the application. Therefore, a communication protocol in VANETs must be able to meet various QoS requirements according to the type of traffic. In VANET, the transmission channel is shared by all the vehicles using the same radio frequency. A poor exploitation of the channel can therefore lead to collisions and wasted bandwidth. A MAC protocol must therefore be designed to share the channel between the different nodes in an efficient and fair way.In this thesis we present the following contributions:1- Analysis and improvement of diffusion in the IEEE 802.11 standard.2- Optimization of the CSMA technique for 1D and 2D networks.3- Design of an adaptive transmission algorithm that updates the Carrier Sense threshold to reach a target value.4- Study the gain obtained by the use of directional antennas for Aloha, non-slotted Aloha, and CSMA.
13

Simulation des conditions de trafic intracellulaire d'un réseau sans fil en milieu industriel par un modèle de propagation composite

Benferhat, Sabri 12 June 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Cette thèse traite de l'utilisation des réseaux locaux sans fil dans un environnement industriel. Nous traitons l'impact des conditions de propagation et leur implémentation, sur des outils de simulations. La première partie s'intéresse au choix du modèle par des méthodes analytiques appliquées sur des mesures. La comparaison des performances obtenues dans un site avec les résultats de simulations montre une nette différence. Elle nous a permis de conclure que les modèles classiques ne permettent pas de simulations pertinentes pour un tel contexte. Pour ces raisons, nous proposons une nouvelle façon de modéliser les conditions de propagation. Notre modèle appelé "split model" permet de distinguer : liens entre stations et point d'accès des liens entre stations. Nous avons utilisé le modèle dans la simulation pour étudier les performances dans une cellule en mode infrastructure de la norme 802.11. Les résultats montrent que des collisions au niveau du point d'accès sont constatées et en résulte une dégradation des performances pour laquelle les mécanismes prévus pour compenser l'effet du terminal caché (RTS/CTS) se sont montrés inefficaces. L'utilisation du split model dans un processus de simulation met en avant les effets dus a l'existence de ces zones cachées et permet d'avoir des résultats obtenus par simulation plus représentatifs du comportement d'une cellule recouvrant une chaîne de production.
14

Wireless LANs, Real-Time Traffic / Wireless LANs, realtidstrafik

Grape, Torbjörn January 2003 (has links)
<p>The usage of Wireless Local Area Networks is increasing rapidly throughout the world. The technology today is not quality proof for the market’s demands. We want to be able to completely wireless perform our demands, such as confer via video or IP-telephony. This is what we call multimedia real-time traffic. It may be achieved over the physical infrastructure in some areas with good results. The goal of this Master’s Thesis is to analyze the possibilities and give solutions and suggestions to achieve multimedia over the wireless networks, with emphasis on the protocol Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA). </p><p>This Master’s Thesis is a theoretical study and the suggested solutions have not been tested in an actual wireless network. Instead they have been tested by computer simulation to give an indication of improvements. Basic configurations are set to the same as in the IEEE 802.11 standard. </p><p>Different methods to reach possible improvements of a WLAN are studied, analyzed and simulated. Such methods are: priority, congestion management and multi-channel protocol. Simulations results show how the priority affects the wireless network and how a multi-channel protocol improves the latency and efficiency of the network. The simulation part is concentrated to show improvements of real-time traffic, which is time sensitive. With a multi- channel protocol the network can allow more users, i.e. more traffic. Also, the network will gain improvement in stability.</p>
15

Modelování přístupových metod datové komunikace po silnoproudých vedeních / Modeling of Medium Access Methods of Power Line Communication

Koutný, Martin January 2011 (has links)
The dissertation thesis is focused on analysis, modeling and optimization of the medium access layer of power line communication. In the first part of the paper, the thesis briefly summarizes a basic information of power line communication. In the next sections, the objectives of the dissertation are placed. A simplification of current models of HomePlug and a optimalization of distribution function in back off procedure are one of the main goals of this work. A detailed analysis of HomePlug technology, which is widespread used in the broadband transmission, follows. The work is focused on analyzing of the MAC layer in this part. The discrete simulation models have been implemented in Matlab. The approximation discrete numerical model has been used for analysis of various distribution functions for HomePlug to optimalize backoff algorithm. The new optimalizations are suitable for large networks. The new approach of MAC modelling is introduced in last part of this work. The new model is not exact as Markov models but it is faster and easier for implementation. The analytical model desribes a system using probabilistic functions.
16

A Clustering-based Multi-channel Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) Communication System

Ding, Ranran 09 April 2010 (has links)
No description available.
17

Performance Analysis of Integrated Multihop Heterogeneous Networks

Luan, Hao 06 December 2010 (has links)
No description available.
18

Design and Implementation of a MAC protocol for Wireless Distributed Computing

Bera, Soumava 28 June 2011 (has links)
The idea of wireless distributed computing (WDC) is rapidly gaining recognition owing to its promising potential in military, public safety and commercial applications. This concept basically entails distributing a computationally intensive task that one radio device is assigned, among its neighboring peer radio devices. The added processing power of multiple radios can be harnessed to significantly reduce the time consumed in obtaining the results of the original complex task. Since the idea of wireless distributed computing depends on a radio device forming a network with its peers, it is imperative and necessary to have a medium access control (MAC) protocol for such networks which is capable of scheduling channel access by multiple radios in the network, ensuring reliable data transfer, incorporating rate adaptation as well as handling link failures. The thesis presented here elaborates the design and implementation of such a MAC protocol for WDC employed in a practical network of radio devices configurable through software. It also brings to light the design and implementation constraints and challenges faced in this endeavor and puts forward viable solutions. / Master of Science
19

Analysis of the MAC protocol in low rate wireless personal area networks with bursty ON-OFF traffic

Gao, J.L., Hu, J., Min, Geyong, Xu, L. January 2013 (has links)
No / Supported by the IEEE 802.15.4 standard, embedded sensor networks have become popular and been widely deployed in recent years. The IEEE 802.15.4 medium access control (MAC) protocol is uniquely designed to meet the desirable requirements of the low end-to-end delay, low packet loss, and low power consumption in the low rate wireless personal areas networks (LR-WPANs). This paper develops an analytical model to quantify the key performance metrics of the MAC protocol in LR-WPANs with bursty ONOFF traffic. This study fills the gap in the literature by removing the assumptions of saturated traffic or nonbursty unsaturated traffic conditions, which are unable to capture the characteristics of bursty multimedia traffic in sensor networks. This analytical model can be used to derive the QoS performance metrics in terms of throughput and total delay. The accuracy of the model is verified through NS-2 (http://www.isi.edu/nsnam/ns/) simulation experiments. This model is adopted to investigate the performance of the MAC protocol in LR-WPANs under various traffic patterns, different loads, and various numbers of stations. Numerical results show that the traffic patterns and traffic burstiness have a significant impact on the delay performance of LR-WPANs.
20

Modelling 802.11 networks for multimedia applications

Dao, Trong Nghia, Electrical Engineering & Telecommunications, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2008 (has links)
This thesis is concerned with the development of new mathematical models for the IEEE 802.11??s access mechanisms, with a particular focus on DCF and EDCA. Accurate mathematical models for the DCF and EDCA access mechanisms provide many benefits, such as improved performance analysis, easier network capacity planning, and robust network design. A feature that permeates the work presented in this thesis is the application of our new models to network environments where both saturated and non-saturated traffic sources are present. The scenario in which multiple traffic sources are present is more technically challenging, but provides for a more realistic setting. Our first contribution is the development of a new Markov model for non-saturated DCF in order to predict the network throughput. This model takes into account several details of the protocol that have been hitherto neglected. In addition, we apply a novel treatment of the packet service time within our model. We show how the inclusion of these effects provides more accurate predictions of network throughput than earlier works. Our second contribution is the development of a new analytical model for EDCA, again in order to predict network throughput. Our new EDCA model is based on a replacement of the normal AIFS parameter of EDCA with a new parameter more closely associated with DCF. This novel procedure allows EDCA to be viewed as a modified multi-mode version of DCF. Our third contribution is the simultaneous application of our new Markov models to both the non-saturated and the saturated regime. Hitherto, network throughput predictions for these regimes have required completely separate mathematical models. The convergence property of our model in the two regimes provides a new method to estimate the network capacity of the network. Our fourth contribution relates to predictions for the multimedia capacity of 802.11 networks. Our multimedia capacity analysis, which is based on modifications to our Markov model, is new in that it can be applied to a broad range of quality of service requirements. Finally, we highlight the use of our analysis in the context of emerging location-enabled networks.

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