TempLab

A Testbed Infrastructure to Study the Impact of Temperature on Wireless Sensor Networks

Conference Paper (2014)
Author(s)

Carlo Alberto Boano (Graz University of Technology)

Marco Zúñiga (TU Delft - Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science)

James Brown (Lancaster University)

Utz Roedig (Lancaster University)

Chamath Keppitiyagama (Swedish Institute of Computer Science)

Kay Römer (Graz University of Technology)

Research Group
Embedded Systems
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/IPSN.2014.6846744 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2014
Language
English
Research Group
Embedded Systems
Article number
6835794
Pages (from-to)
95-106
ISBN (print)
978-1-4799-3146-0
Event
13th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks, IPSN 2014 (2014-04-15 - 2014-04-17), Berlin, Germany
Downloads counter
124

Abstract

Temperature has a strong impact on the operations of all electrical and electronic components. In wireless sensor nodes, temperature variations can lead to loss of synchronization, degradation of the link quality, or early battery depletion, and can therefore affect key network metrics such as throughput, delay, and lifetime. Considering that most outdoor deployments are exposed to strong temperature variations across time and space, a deep understanding of how temperature affects network protocols is fundamental to comprehend flaws in their design and to improve their performance. Existing testbed infrastructures, however, do not allow to systematically study the impact of temperature on wireless sensor networks. In this paper we present TempLab, an extension for wireless sensor network testbeds that allows to control the on-board temperature of sensor nodes and to study the effects of temperature variations on the network performance in a precise and repeatable fashion. TempLab can accurately reproduce traces recorded in outdoor environments with fine granularity, while minimizing the hardware costs and configuration overhead. We use TempLab to analyse the detrimental effects of temperature variations (i) on processing performance, (ii) on a tree routing protocol, and (iii) on CSMA-based MAC protocols, deriving insights that would have not been revealed using existing testbed installations.