Coverage and Connectivity in Three-Dimensional Networks
S. M. Nazrul Alam, Zygmunt J. Haas

TL;DR
This paper investigates optimal node placement strategies for 3D wireless networks to ensure full coverage and connectivity, proposing methods that reduce the number of nodes needed compared to traditional approaches.
Contribution
It introduces the use of Voronoi tessellation with truncated octahedral cells for efficient 3D network deployment, providing proven strategies for coverage and connectivity.
Findings
Truncated octahedral placement minimizes node count.
Connectivity maintained if transmission range ≥ 1.7889 times sensing range.
Simulation confirms coverage guarantees.
Abstract
Most wireless terrestrial networks are designed based on the assumption that the nodes are deployed on a two-dimensional (2D) plane. However, this 2D assumption is not valid in underwater, atmospheric, or space communications. In fact, recent interest in underwater acoustic ad hoc and sensor networks hints at the need to understand how to design networks in 3D. Unfortunately, the design of 3D networks is surprisingly more difficult than the design of 2D networks. For example, proofs of Kelvin's conjecture and Kepler's conjecture required centuries of research to achieve breakthroughs, whereas their 2D counterparts are trivial to solve. In this paper, we consider the coverage and connectivity issues of 3D networks, where the goal is to find a node placement strategy with 100% sensing coverage of a 3D space, while minimizing the number of nodes required for surveillance. Our results…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUnderwater Vehicles and Communication Systems · Energy Efficient Wireless Sensor Networks · Opportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks
