학술논문

Maximise unsafe path routing protocol for forest fire monitoring system using Wireless Sensor Networks
Document Type
Conference
Source
2012 IEEE 3rd International Conference on Networked Embedded Systems for Every Application (NESEA) Networked Embedded Systems for Every Application (NESEA), 2012 IEEE 3rd International Conference on. :1-8 Dec, 2012
Subject
Computing and Processing
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Routing
Routing protocols
Wireless sensor networks
Temperature sensors
Measurement
Monitoring
Robustness
energy efficient routing
disaster scenarios
Language
Abstract
Wireless Sensor Networks are an emerging technology with wide potential to be used in many applications. One such application is the detection and prevention of disasters in scenarios such as forest fires, floods and earthquakes. In these disaster situations, the events being monitored have the potential to destroy the sensing devices, for example, they can be burnt in a fire, sunk in a flood, melted in volcano lava, short-circuited in harmful chemicals, etc. In this paper, a novel energy-efficient routing protocol called Maximise Unsafe Path (MUP) Routing using IPv6 over Low power Wireless Personal Area Networks (6LoWPAN) is presented. The protocol aims to extend network lifetime by adapting the routes accordingly based on node destruction threat. MUP uses a routing technique that maximises the energy utilisation of nodes that are going to fail sooner, in order to save the energy of the other nodes. MUP is implemented as an extension to the RPL protocol for IPv6-based WSNs. The performance of the presented routing is evaluated with simulations and compared with the standard RPL in the same scenarios.