A New Phase Transition for Local Delays in MANETs
Fran\c{c}ois Baccelli (INRIA Rocquencourt), Bartek Blaszczyszyn (INRIA, Rocquencourt)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the behavior of local delays in MANETs under a Poisson node distribution, revealing a phase transition phenomenon where average delays switch from finite to infinite depending on network parameters, influenced by outage conditions.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of contention phase transition in MANETs and demonstrates how adaptive coding can mitigate infinite delays caused by outage logic.
Findings
Finite mean delays in most cases with fading and noise
Existence of a phase transition where delays become infinite
Adaptive coding can ensure finite average delays
Abstract
We consider Mobile Ad-hoc Network (MANET) with transmitters located according to a Poisson point in the Euclidean plane, slotted Aloha Medium Access (MAC) protocol and the so-called outage scenario, where a successful transmission requires a Signal-to-Interference-and-Noise (SINR) larger than some threshold. We analyze the local delays in such a network, namely the number of times slots required for nodes to transmit a packet to their prescribed next-hop receivers. The analysis depends very much on the receiver scenario and on the variability of the fading. In most cases, each node has finite-mean geometric random delay and thus a positive next hop throughput. However, the spatial (or large population) averaging of these individual finite mean-delays leads to infinite values in several practical cases, including the Rayleigh fading and positive thermal noise case. In some cases it…
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