Comparative Study of Sink Node Placement Strategies of Wireless Sensor Network

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G. Sateesh, N. S. A. Chandrika, S. Alekhya,U. Sunandha, V. Naveen

Abstract

One of the fundamental design challenges in designing a Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is to be more maximize the network lifetime, as each sensor node of the network is equipped with a limited power battery. Wireless Sensor Networks are rapidly growing area of research and commercial development. Meanwhile it draws attention of many researchers because of the enormous scope of its applications in numerous areas. A Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) consists of large number of spatially distributed autonomous sensors to monitor physical environment conditions, such as temperature, sound, humidity, pressure, light etc. and pass their data often called raw data through the network to Base Station which is often called Sink. The sink forms the gateway between the WSN and end-user application. In real time applications sensors collect data and transfer to the sink. Generally Sensors have limited range and less battery life. In this paper our main goal is to increase the network life time of sensors and reduce their energy consumption of the network. In this paper two sink placement strategies are implemented along with an existing strategy geographical sink placement strategy (GSP) by placing sink in an appropriate area to cover maximum number no of sensors in the region of an network. The advantages of these two strategies were analyzed and compare with an existing strategy.

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How to Cite
, G. S. N. S. A. C. S. A. S. V. N. (2016). Comparative Study of Sink Node Placement Strategies of Wireless Sensor Network. International Journal on Recent and Innovation Trends in Computing and Communication, 4(3), 304–309. https://doi.org/10.17762/ijritcc.v4i3.1883
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