TY - JOUR
T1 - On the Interplay between Deadline-Constrained Traffic and the Number of Allowed Retransmissions in Random Access Networks
AU - Nomikos, Nikolaos
AU - Charalambous, Themistoklis
AU - Wichman, Risto
AU - Pignolet, Yvonne Anne
AU - Pappas, Nikolaos
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.
PY - 2024/8
Y1 - 2024/8
N2 - In this paper, a network comprising wireless devices equipped with buffers transmitting deadline-constrained data packets over a slotted-ALOHA random-access channel is studied. Although communication protocols facilitating retransmissions increase reliability, a packet awaiting transmission from the queue experiences delays. Thus, packets with time constraints might be dropped before being successfully transmitted, while at the same time causing the queue size of the buffer to increase. To understand the trade-off between reliability and delays that might lead to packet drops due to deadline-constrained bursty traffic with retransmissions, the scenario of a wireless network utilizing a slotted-ALOHA random-access channel is investigated. The main focus is to reveal the trade-off between the number of retransmissions and the packet deadline as a function of the arrival rate. Towards this end, analysis of the system is performed by means of discrete-time Markov chains. Two scenarios are studied: (i) the collision channel model (in which a receiver can decode only when a single packet is transmitted), and (ii) the case for which receivers have multi-packet reception capabilities. A performance evaluation for a user with different transmit probabilities and number of retransmissions is conducted. We are able to determine numerically the optimal probability of transmissions and the number of retransmissions, given the packet arrival rate and the packet deadline. Furthermore, we highlight the impact of transmit probability and the number of retransmissions on the average drop rate and throughput.
AB - In this paper, a network comprising wireless devices equipped with buffers transmitting deadline-constrained data packets over a slotted-ALOHA random-access channel is studied. Although communication protocols facilitating retransmissions increase reliability, a packet awaiting transmission from the queue experiences delays. Thus, packets with time constraints might be dropped before being successfully transmitted, while at the same time causing the queue size of the buffer to increase. To understand the trade-off between reliability and delays that might lead to packet drops due to deadline-constrained bursty traffic with retransmissions, the scenario of a wireless network utilizing a slotted-ALOHA random-access channel is investigated. The main focus is to reveal the trade-off between the number of retransmissions and the packet deadline as a function of the arrival rate. Towards this end, analysis of the system is performed by means of discrete-time Markov chains. Two scenarios are studied: (i) the collision channel model (in which a receiver can decode only when a single packet is transmitted), and (ii) the case for which receivers have multi-packet reception capabilities. A performance evaluation for a user with different transmit probabilities and number of retransmissions is conducted. We are able to determine numerically the optimal probability of transmissions and the number of retransmissions, given the packet arrival rate and the packet deadline. Furthermore, we highlight the impact of transmit probability and the number of retransmissions on the average drop rate and throughput.
KW - deadline-constrained traffic
KW - delay-sensitive communications
KW - discrete-time Markov chains
KW - low-latency communications
KW - multi-packet reception
KW - packet deadlines
KW - queuing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202602615&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/e26080655
DO - 10.3390/e26080655
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85202602615
SN - 1099-4300
VL - 26
JO - Entropy
JF - Entropy
IS - 8
M1 - 655
ER -