SFMAC
Bleeps that enable high-density LoRaWANs
Teresa Blanco Abad (TU Delft - Networked Systems)
Vijay Rao (Cognizant)
Nikos Kouvelas (TNO)
Venkatesha Prasad (TU Delft - Networked Systems)
Kumar Ramamoorthy (Cognizant)
Sujay Narayana (TU Delft - Networked Systems)
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Abstract
LoRaWANs, a widely accepted IoT connectivity solution, adopt a simple (ALOHA-like) MAC layer, enabling low-power communication at the cost of scalability due to packet collisions. Hence, current studies on LoRaWAN conclude that the network does not support dense deployments. Several alternative MACs are proposed but they stumble upon well-known limitations: time division eliminates the asynchrony of LoRa nodes but requires feedback from the gateways; carrier-sensing-based protocols are heavily constrained by the reduced sensing ranges of the devices, thus creating a large number of hidden terminals, leading to collisions. To enhance LoRaWAN to cater to both low- and high-density deployments, in this paper, we propose Spreading Factor MAC (SFMAC), a novel, practical, distributed, and energy-efficient MAC protocol. SFMAC, a channel-sensing-based MAC, takes an unconventional approach to eliminate hidden terminals - by operating with pairs of SFs, wherein the higher SF is used for channel sensing and the lower for data transmission. Bleeps are transmitted in the higher SF as they can be sensed at longer ranges. SFMAC does not require any change in hardware or the LoRaWAN protocol. We demonstrate that the fundamental tradeoff made by SFMAC - utilizing two SFs per data transmission instead of using all for data - works extremely well due to the elimination of hidden terminals. Through real-world experiments on 30 SX1261 devices and data-driven ns-3 simulations, we showcase that SFMAC increases goodput and channel utilization by manifolds over state-of-the-art protocols such as p-CARMA, np-CECADA, and LMAC.
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File under embargo until 15-05-2026