On the Design of Thermal-Aware Duty-Cycle MAC Protocol for IoT Healthcare

Wireless Body Area Networks (WBANs) are designed to provide connectivity among diverse miniature body sensors that support different Internet of Things (IoT) healthcare applications. Among diverse body sensors, WBANs exploit in-vivo sensor nodes that detect and collect the required biometric data of...

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Main Authors: Muhammad Mostafa Monowar, Madini O. Alassafi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-02-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/20/5/1243
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spelling doaj-e3b7d68b364f4da5852bbed93848a0e72020-11-25T00:36:54ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202020-02-01205124310.3390/s20051243s20051243On the Design of Thermal-Aware Duty-Cycle MAC Protocol for IoT HealthcareMuhammad Mostafa Monowar0Madini O. Alassafi1Department of Information Technology, Faculty of Computing and Information Technology, King AbdulAziz University, Jeddah 21589, Saudi ArabiaDepartment of Information Technology, Faculty of Computing and Information Technology, King AbdulAziz University, Jeddah 21589, Saudi ArabiaWireless Body Area Networks (WBANs) are designed to provide connectivity among diverse miniature body sensors that support different Internet of Things (IoT) healthcare applications. Among diverse body sensors, WBANs exploit in-vivo sensor nodes that detect and collect the required biometric data of certain physiological change inside the human body, and transmits the sensed data utilizing wireless communication. However, sensing and wireless communication activities of in-vivo sensors produce heat and could result thermal damage to the human tissue if the sensing and communication continues for a long period. Furthermore, Quality of Service (QoS) provisioning for diverse traffic types is another striking requirement for WBANs. These pressing yet conflicting concerns trigger the design of ThMAC—a Thermal aware duty cycle MAC protocol for IoT healthcare. The protocol regulates the communication operation of a body sensor based on estimated temperature surrounding a tissue to maintain moderate temperature level in a body, also avoiding hotspot. Exploiting both contention-based and contention free channel access mechanisms, ThMAC introduces a superframe structure, where disjoint periods are allocated for diverse traffic types to achieve QoS provisioning. Moreover, ThMAC ensures a reliable and timely delivery of sporadically generated emergency data through an emergency data management mechanism. ThMAC performance is evaluated through computer simulations in terms of thermal rise, energy consumption as well as QoS metrics such as delay and reliability. The results show superior performance of ThMAC compared to that of IEEE 802.15.6.https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/20/5/1243wireless body area networksduty cycle macthermal-aware
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Mostafa Monowar
Madini O. Alassafi
spellingShingle Muhammad Mostafa Monowar
Madini O. Alassafi
On the Design of Thermal-Aware Duty-Cycle MAC Protocol for IoT Healthcare
Sensors
wireless body area networks
duty cycle mac
thermal-aware
author_facet Muhammad Mostafa Monowar
Madini O. Alassafi
author_sort Muhammad Mostafa Monowar
title On the Design of Thermal-Aware Duty-Cycle MAC Protocol for IoT Healthcare
title_short On the Design of Thermal-Aware Duty-Cycle MAC Protocol for IoT Healthcare
title_full On the Design of Thermal-Aware Duty-Cycle MAC Protocol for IoT Healthcare
title_fullStr On the Design of Thermal-Aware Duty-Cycle MAC Protocol for IoT Healthcare
title_full_unstemmed On the Design of Thermal-Aware Duty-Cycle MAC Protocol for IoT Healthcare
title_sort on the design of thermal-aware duty-cycle mac protocol for iot healthcare
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Wireless Body Area Networks (WBANs) are designed to provide connectivity among diverse miniature body sensors that support different Internet of Things (IoT) healthcare applications. Among diverse body sensors, WBANs exploit in-vivo sensor nodes that detect and collect the required biometric data of certain physiological change inside the human body, and transmits the sensed data utilizing wireless communication. However, sensing and wireless communication activities of in-vivo sensors produce heat and could result thermal damage to the human tissue if the sensing and communication continues for a long period. Furthermore, Quality of Service (QoS) provisioning for diverse traffic types is another striking requirement for WBANs. These pressing yet conflicting concerns trigger the design of ThMAC—a Thermal aware duty cycle MAC protocol for IoT healthcare. The protocol regulates the communication operation of a body sensor based on estimated temperature surrounding a tissue to maintain moderate temperature level in a body, also avoiding hotspot. Exploiting both contention-based and contention free channel access mechanisms, ThMAC introduces a superframe structure, where disjoint periods are allocated for diverse traffic types to achieve QoS provisioning. Moreover, ThMAC ensures a reliable and timely delivery of sporadically generated emergency data through an emergency data management mechanism. ThMAC performance is evaluated through computer simulations in terms of thermal rise, energy consumption as well as QoS metrics such as delay and reliability. The results show superior performance of ThMAC compared to that of IEEE 802.15.6.
topic wireless body area networks
duty cycle mac
thermal-aware
url https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/20/5/1243
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