Seminar: ECE Faculty Candidate

Monday
March 6th
11:00 - 11:50am
KEC 1005


Romit Roy Choudhury
Ph.D. Candidate
Computer Science
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign



Utilizing Beamforming Antennas for Wireless Multihop Networks


Wireless multihop networks are gaining popularity in applications such
as mesh networks, wireless backbones, and sensor networks.
Typically, communication protocols designed for such networks have
explicitly or implicitly assumed an omnidirectional antenna at the radio
layer. With recent progress in signal processing and antenna
technologies, smart beamforming antennas have become feasible at cheaper
prices, making them an attractive replacement to omnidirectional
antennas. With beamforming antennas, the ability to guide RF energy in
desired directions can lead to higher spatial reuse of the channel.
Also, the higher communication range of beamforming antennas can be
exploited to achieve stronger network connectivity, and to obtain fewer
hop routes. However, existing protocols considered suitable for
omnidirectional antennas are incapable of achieving these benefits. We
have identified several weaknesses in these protocols, including new
kinds of hidden terminal problems, "deafness", "MAC-layer capture",
etc., that together degrade overall network performance.
We have addressed each of these weaknesses systematically, and developed
a better understanding of the theoretical improvements in capacity,
achievable with beamforming antennas. Based on the insights, we have
designed medium access control (MAC) and routing protocols to fully
exploit the benefits of beamforming. We have demonstrated part of our
solutions on a prototype testbed, equipped with electronically steerable
antennas.

This presentation will discuss our work on exploiting current and future
smart-antenna systems in wireless multihop networks. I will describe the
new challenges that arise with beamforming, and focus on the design,
analysis, and evaluation of a new MAC and routing protocol. I will also
summarize practical experiences from building a prototype testbed that
utilizes beamforming antennas for multihop communication.



Biography:

Romit Roy Choudhury is a Ph.D. candidate of Computer Science at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His research interests are
in networking and systems, with an emphasis on wireless mesh networks,
sensor networks, and ad hoc networks. Romit won the best paper award at
the 2003 Personal Wireless Communications conference for his work on
routing using directional antennas. He is a recipient of the Motorola
Center for Communications Fellowship during 2003-2005, and the Vodafone
Fellowship during 2005-2006. Further information is available at
http://www.crhc.uiuc.edu/~croy/.


_______________________________________________
Colloquium mailing list
[email protected]
https://secure.engr.oregonstate.edu/mailman/listinfo/colloquium

Reply via email to