Signals, Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 774-793 , 01/12/2024

A 2.4 GHz IEEE 802.15.4 Multi-Hop Network for Mountainous Forest and Watercourse Environments: Sensor Node Deployment and Performance Evaluation

Apidet Booranawong, Puwasit Hirunkitrangsri, Dujdow Buranapanichkit, Charernkiat Pochaiya, Nattha Jindapetch, Hiroshi Saito

Abstract

In this paper, we demonstrate the realistic test of a 2.4 GHz multi-hop wireless network for mountainous forest and watercourse environments. A multi-hop network using IEEE 802.15.4 XBee3 micro-modules and a communication protocol among nodes were developed. A wireless node deployment solution was introduced for practical testing. The proposed system’s communication reliability was tested in two different scenarios: a mountainous forest with sloping areas and trees and a watercourse, which referred to environmental and flooding monitoring applications. Wireless network performances were evaluated through the received signal strength indicator (RSSI) level of each wireless link, a packet delivery ratio (PDR), as the successful rate of packet transmission, and the end-to-end delay (ETED) of all data packets from the transmitter to the receiver. The experimental results demonstrate the success of the multi-hop WSN deployment and communication in both scenarios, where the RSSI of each link was kept at the accepted level and the PDR achieved the highest result. Furthermore, as a real-time response, the data from the source could be sent to the sink with a small ETED.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

IEEE802.15.4implementationmountainous forestmulti-hopwatercourse

ASJC Subject Area

Engineering : Engineering (miscellaneous)

Funding Agency

Faculty of Engineering, Prince of Songkla University


Bibliography


Booranawong, A., Hirunkitrangsri, P., Buranapanichkit, D., Pochaiya, C., Jindapetch, N., & Saito, H. (2024). A 2.4 GHz IEEE 802.15.4 Multi-Hop Network for Mountainous Forest and Watercourse Environments: Sensor Node Deployment and Performance Evaluation. Signals, 5(4) 774-793. doi:10.3390/signals5040043

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