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On Time-Out Driven Power Management Policies in Wireless Networks

Abstract

Switching the devices to low-power states in prolonged period of inactivity is a widely used technique to conserve energy for battery-powered wireless devices. In this paper, we present a mathematical abstraction of time-out driven power management policies together with different wakeup mechanism in wireless networks to characterize the energy-performance trade-offs. The time-out driven power management is modeled as a MlG/1/K queue with multiple vacations and an attention span. We then derive the steady state behaviors of such systems, and present a closed-form solution for systems with large buffers. The analysis reveals that the “best” power management policy to minimize energy-delay product exhibits a threshold structure, i.e., when the traffic load is below certain threshold, a node should switch to the low-power state whenever possible and always remain active otherwise, and suggests a threshold-based power management protocol.

Authors

Zheng R; Hou JC; Sha L

Volume

6

Pagination

pp. 4097-4103

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Publication Date

January 1, 2004

DOI

10.1109/glocom.2004.1379136

Name of conference

IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference, 2004. GLOBECOM '04.
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