This paper presents the evaluation of the multi-hop aggregate information efficiency of the slotted and unslotted ALOHA protocols. We consider a multi-hop wireless network where the nodes are spatially characterized by a Poisson point process and the traffic generation also follows a Poisson distribution. By applying the properties of stochastic geometry, we derive a closed-form lower bound on the outage probability as a function of the required communication rate, the single-hop distance, the number of hops and the maximum number of retransmissions. The results indicate that slotted ALOHA always outperforms its unslotted version, demonstrating the importance of synchronization in distributed networks. In addition, we show that it is always possible to optimize the network efficiency by properly setting the required rate for a given packet density. Finally, in the scenario considered, the use of retransmissions and multiple hops never achieves the best performance if compared to the option of single-hop links without retransmissions.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.