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IEICE Transactions on Communications
Online ISSN : 1745-1345
Print ISSN : 0916-8516
Regular Section
Impact of Hidden Nodes on On-Demand AP Wake-Up Exploiting WLAN Signals
Yuma ASADAHiroyuki YOMO
Author information
  • Yuma ASADA

    Faculty of Engineering Science, Kansai University

  • Hiroyuki YOMO

    Faculty of Engineering Science, Kansai University

Corresponding author

ORCID
Keywords:green networking,wireless LAN,IEEE 802.11,wake-up receiver,hidden node
JOURNALRESTRICTED ACCESS

2016 Volume E99.BIssue 4Pages 939-950

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1587/transcom.2015EBP3311
Details
  • Published: April 01, 2016Manuscript Received: July 22, 2015Released on J-STAGE: April 01, 2016Accepted: -Advance online publication: -Manuscript Revised: November 26, 2015
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Abstract
This paper investigates the impact of hidden nodes (HNs) on on-demand access point (AP) wake-up that is employed to realize energy-efficient wireless LANs (WLANs). The considered wake-up signaling exploits IEEE 802.11 signals transmitted by a WLAN station (STA) to remotely activate a sleeping AP: a STA with communication demands transmits a series of WLAN frames with their length corresponding to the wake-up ID. A wake-up receiver attached to each AP detects the length of WLAN frames with the low-power operations of envelope detection and on-off-keying (OOK) demodulation. Since WLAN frames constituting a wake-up signal are transmitted by a STA following carrier sense multiple access (CSMA) protocol, they are vulnerable to the well-known hidden node (HN) problem. The impact of HNs on wake-up signaling is different from that on data communications since the wake-up receiver employs unconventional frame length detection to extract the information on the wake-up ID from the received signal. In this paper, we first investigate the impact of HNs on wake-up failure probability with theoretical and experimental evaluations. If the degradation of wake-up signalling due to HNs is observed for a STA, the corresponding STA may suffer from collisions due to the same HNs for its data communications even if it manages to succeed in the wake-up process. In this case, the wake-up operation itself may not be necessary. Therefore, we also compare the impact of HNs on wake-up signaling and that on data communications after the wake-up process. These results and discussions provide us with an insight on the impact of HNs on on-demand AP wake-up exploiting WLAN signals.
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© 2016 The Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication Engineers
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