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INFOCOM
2003
IEEE

Impact of Interferences on Connectivity in Ad Hoc Networks

13 years 9 months ago
Impact of Interferences on Connectivity in Ad Hoc Networks
Abstract— We study the impact of interferences on the connectivity of large-scale ad-hoc networks, using percolation theory. We assume that a bi-directional connection can be set up between two nodes if the signal to noise ratio at the receiver is larger than some threshold. The noise is the sum of the contribution of interferences from all other nodes, weighted by a coefficient γ, and of a background noise. We find that there is a critical value of γ above which the network is made of disconnected clusters of nodes. We also prove that if γ is non zero but small enough, there exist node spatial densities for which the network contains a large (theoretically infinite) cluster of nodes, enabling distant nodes to communicate in multiple hops. Since small values of γ cannot be achieved without efficient CDMA codes, we investigate the use of a very simple TDMA scheme, where nodes can emit only every n-th time slot. We show qualitatively that it even achieves a better connectivity ...
Olivier Dousse, François Baccelli, Patrick
Added 04 Jul 2010
Updated 04 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2003
Where INFOCOM
Authors Olivier Dousse, François Baccelli, Patrick Thiran
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