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      An Adaptive Topology Management Scheme to Maintain Network Connectivity in Wireless Sensor Networks

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      Sensors
      MDPI AG

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          Abstract

          The roots of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) are tracked back to US military developments, and, currently, WSNs have paved their way into a vast domain of civil applications, especially environmental, critical infrastructure, habitat monitoring, etc. In the majority of these applications, WSNs have been deployed to monitor critical and inaccessible terrains; however, due to their unique and resource-constrained nature, WSNs face many design and deployment challenges in these difficult-to-access working environments, including connectivity maintenance, topology management, reliability, etc. However, for WSNs, topology management and connectivity still remain a major concern in WSNs that hampers their operations, with a direct impact on the overall application performance of WSNs. To address this issue, in this paper, we propose a new topology management and connectivity maintenance scheme called a Tolerating Fault and Maintaining Network Connectivity using Array Antenna (ToMaCAA) for WSNs. ToMaCAA is a system designed to adapt to dynamic structures and maintain network connectivity while consuming fewer network resources. Thereafter, we incorporated a Phase Array Antenna into the existing topology management technologies, proving ToMaCAA to be a novel contribution. This new approach allows a node to connect to the farthest node in the network while conserving resources and energy. Moreover, data transmission is restricted to one route, reducing overheads and conserving energy in various other nodes’ idle listening state. For the implementation of ToMaCAA, the MATLAB network simulation platform has been used to test and analyse its performance. The output results were compared with the benchmark schemes, i.e., Disjoint Path Vector (DPV), Adaptive Disjoint Path Vector (ADPV), and Pickup Non-Critical Node Based k-Connectivity (PINC). The performance of ToMaCAA was evaluated based on different performance metrics, i.e., the network lifetime, total number of transmitted messages, and node failure in WSNs. The output results revealed that the ToMaCAA outperformed the DPV, ADPV, and PINC schemes in terms of maintaining network connectivity during link failures and made the network more fault-tolerant and reliable.

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          Most cited references26

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          Topology management techniques for tolerating node failures in wireless sensor networks: A survey

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            Distributed Recovery from Network Partitioning in Movable Sensor/Actor Networks via Controlled Mobility

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              Connectivity restoration in a partitioned wireless sensor network with assured fault tolerance

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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                SENSC9
                Sensors
                Sensors
                MDPI AG
                1424-8220
                April 2022
                April 08 2022
                : 22
                : 8
                : 2855
                Article
                10.3390/s22082855
                35458846
                2b49c526-4482-4082-921d-27c698a0d7d2
                © 2022

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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