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Subject
Objectives:
The main objectives of this thesis are: - To evaluate the performance of TSCH in Contiki-NG on real testbeds. - To define suitable metrics for assessing the performance of TSCH. - To identify areas of improvement for TSCH where performance metrics indicate suboptimal results.
co-promoter: Prof. An Braeken
Kind of work
Methodology: The testbed consists of dual motes, composed of two Zolertia devices. These dual motes form two separate networks: the monitoring network and the observed network. The monitoring network facilitates the measurement of performance parameters such as delay, power consumption, and Packet Delivery Ratio (PDR). By conducting this research, a comprehensive understanding of the performance of TSCH in Contiki-NG can be obtained, leading to potential enhancements for the protocol's practical deployment in IoT networks.
Framework of the Thesis
References:
[1] R. Van Glabbeek, E. H. Teshome, D. Deac, T. Jemal, J. Tiberghien and K. Steenhaut, "A Building Block for Internet of Things Prototyping," IECON 2022 48th Annual Conference of the IEEE Industrial Electronics Society, Brussels, Belgium, 2022, pp. 1-6, doi: 10.1109/IECON49645.2022.9968886.
[2] Teshome, E. Deac, D. Thielemans, S. Carlier, M. Steenhaut, K. Braeken, A. Dobrota, V. Time Slotted Channel Hopping and ContikiMAC for IPv6 Multicast-Enabled Wireless Sensor Networks. Sensors 2021, 21, 1771. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21051771 Promoters: Prof. Kris Steenhaut, Prof. An Braeken Supervisors: Diana Deac, Roald Van Glabbeek
Number of Students
2
Expected Student Profile
Programming Skills: The student should have intermediate C programming language skills.
Networking Knowledge: The student should become familiar with TSCH
Operating Systems and Embedded Systems: The student should become familiar with operating systems designed for LLNs, such as Contiki-NG, and embedded systems.
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