Energy Consumption Anatomy of 802.11 Devices and its Implication on Modeling and Design
Date
2012-12-10Abstract
A thorough understanding of the power consumption behavior
of real world wireless devices is of paramount importance
to ground energy-efficient protocols and optimizations on realistic and accurate energy models. This paper provides an
in-depth experimental investigation of the per-frame energy
consumption components in 802.11 Wireless LAN devices.To the best of our knowledge, our measurements are the first to unveil that a substantial fraction of energy consumption, hereafter descriptively named cross-factor, may be ascribed to each individual frame while it crosses the protocol/implementation stack (OS, driver, NIC). Our findings, summarized in a convenient new energy consumption model, contrast traditional models which either neglect or amortize such energy cost component in a fixed baseline cost, and raise the alert that, in some cases, conclusions drawn using traditional energy models may be fallacious.
Subject
Q Science::Q Science (General)Q Science::QA Mathematics::QA76 Computer software
T Technology::T Technology (General)
T Technology::TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
T Technology::TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering