Energy-Efficient Medium Access Control Protocols for Cognitive Radio Sensor Networks: A Comparative Survey

Sensors (Basel). 2018 Nov 5;18(11):3781. doi: 10.3390/s18113781.

Abstract

The increase of application areas in wireless sensor networks demands novel solutions in terms of energy consumption and radio frequency management. Cognitive radio sensor networks (CRSNs) are key for ensuring efficient spectrum management, by making it possible to use the unused licensed frequency spectrum together with the unlicensed frequency spectrum. Sensor nodes powered by energy-constrained batteries necessarily require energy-efficient protocols at the routing and medium access control (MAC) layers. In CRSNs, energy efficiency is more important because the sensor nodes consume additional energy for spectrum sensing and management. To the best of authors' knowledge, there is no survey on "energy-efficient" MAC protocols for CRSNs in the literature, even though a conceptual review on MAC protocols for CRSNs was presented at a conference recently. In this paper, energy-efficient MAC protocols for CRSNs are extensively surveyed and qualitatively compared. Open issues, and research challenges in the design of MAC protocols for CRSNs, are also discussed.

Keywords: cognitive radio; cognitive radio sensor network; energy efficiency; medium access control; network lifetime; network protocol; wireless sensor network.

Publication types

  • Review