2018
Authors
Balador, A; Kouba, A; Cassioli, D; Foukalas, F; Severino, R; Stepanova, D; Agosta, G; Xie, J; Pomante, L; Mongelli, M; Pierini, P; Petersen, S; Sukuvaara, T;
Publication
SENSORS
Abstract
Cooperative Cyber-Physical Systems (Co-CPSs) can be enabled using wireless communication technologies, which in principle should address reliability and safety challenges. Safety for Co-CPS enabled by wireless communication technologies is a crucial aspect and requires new dedicated design approaches. In this paper, we provide an overview of five Co-CPS use cases, as introduced in our SafeCOP EU project, and analyze their safety design requirements. Next, we provide a comprehensive analysis of the main existing wireless communication technologies giving details about the protocols developed within particular standardization bodies. We also investigate to what extent they address the non-functional requirements in terms of safety, security and real time, in the different application domains of each use case. Finally, we discuss general recommendations about the use of different wireless communication technologies showing their potentials in the selected real-world use cases. The discussion is provided under consideration in the 5G standardization process within 3GPP, whose current efforts are inline to current gaps in wireless communications protocols for Co-CPSs including many future use cases.
2016
Authors
Kurunathan, H; Severino, R; Koubaa, A; Tovar, E;
Publication
2016 IEEE REAL-TIME AND EMBEDDED TECHNOLOGY AND APPLICATIONS SYMPOSIUM (RTAS)
Abstract
2016
Authors
Severino, R; Ullah, S; Tovar, E;
Publication
TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
Abstract
Wireless sensor networks show great potential to successfully address the timeliness and energy-efficiency requirements of different cyber-physical system applications. Generally, these requirements span several layers of the stack and demand an on-line mechanism capable of efficiently tuning several parameters, in order to better support highly dynamic traffic characteristics. This work presents a cross-layer QoS management framework for ZigBee cluster-tree networks. The proposed framework carries out an on-line control of a set of parameters ranging from the MAC sub-layer to the network layer, improving the successful transmission probability and minimizing the memory requirements and queuing delays through an efficient bandwidth allocation at the network clusters. Through extensive simulations in a real datacenter monitoring application scenario, we show that the proposed framework improves the successful transmission probability by 10%, and reduces the end-to-end delay by 94%.
2017
Authors
Kurunathan, H; Severino, R; Koubaa, A; Tovar, E;
Publication
IEEE International Workshop on Factory Communication Systems - Proceedings, WFCS
Abstract
With an advancement towards the paradigm of Internet of Things (IoT), in which every device will be interconnected and communicating with each other, the field of wireless sensor networks has helped to resolve an ever-growing demand in meeting deadlines and reducing power consumption. Among several standards that provide support for IoT, the recently published IEEE 802.15.4e protocol is specifically designed to meet the QoS requirements of industrial applications. IEEE 802.15.4e provides five Medium-Access Control (MAC) behaviors, including three that target time-critical applications: Deterministic and Synchronous Multichannel Extension (DSME); Time Slotted Channel Hopping (TSCH) and Low Latency Deterministic Network (LLDN). However, the standard and the literature do not provide any worst-case bound analysis of these behaviors, thus it is not possible to effectively predict their timing performance in an application and accurately devise a network in accordance to such constraints. This paper fills this gap by contributing network models for the three time-critical MAC behaviors using Network Calculus. These models allow deriving the worst-case performance of the MAC behaviors in terms of delay and buffering requirements. We then complement these results by carrying out a thorough performance analysis of these MAC behaviors by observing the impact of different parameters. © 2017 IEEE.
2017
Authors
Kurunathan, H; Severino, R; Koubaa, A; Tovar, E;
Publication
IEEE 13th International Workshop on Factory Communication Systems, WFCS 2017, Trondheim, Norway, May 31 - June 2, 2017
Abstract
2018
Authors
Kurunathan, H; Severino, R; Koubaa, A; Tovar, E;
Publication
Proceedings - 17th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks, IPSN 2018
Abstract
Deterministic Synchronous Multichannel Extension (DSME) is a prominent MAC behavior first introduced in IEEE 802.15.4e that supports deterministic guarantees using its multisuperframe structure. DSME also facilitates techniques like multi-channel and CAP reduction that help to increase the number of available guaranteed timeslots in a network. However, no tuning of these functionalities in dynamic scenarios is supported in the standard. In this paper, we present an effective multisuperframe tuning technique that also helps to utilize CAP reduction in an effective manner improving flexibility and scalability, while guaranteeing bounded delay. © 2018 IEEE.
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