posted on 2014-07-22, 08:20authored byChristina Thorpe, Liam Murphy
This survey provides a comprehensive review of
existing physical carrier sensing enhancements for IEEE 802.11
wireless networks. The original physical carrier sensing mechanism,
used by wireless stations to gain access to the medium,
is limited. Consequently, IEEE 802.11 networks are vulnerable
to the presence of hidden and exposed nodes. Such nodes can
significantly decrease system performance by increasing the
collision rate and decreasing the channel spatial reuse. The
value of the physical carrier sensing threshold is a key factor
influencing the presence of hidden and exposed nodes in a
wireless network. Several enhancements have been proposed in
the literature, which attempt to mitigate the loss in performance
caused by the limited carrier sensing. Firstly, the notion of an
optimum carrier sensing threshold has been studied, and results
indicate that it can be tuned to an optimum value. Building on
the positive early results, further work was performed to develop
mechanisms that dynamically adjust the threshold according to
varying network conditions. This article presents an in-depth
survey of the existing literature in the area, detailing the various
approaches and their efficacy in addressing the problem of hidden
and exposed nodes (and consequently increasing performance). It
offers a comparison of the techniques, by evaluating the models,
limitations, assumptions, and performance gains.