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The monitoring and control of crops in precision agriculture sometimes requires a high collection frequency of information (e.g., temperature, humidity, and salinity) due to the variability in crops. Data acquisition and transmission are generally achieved thanks to wireless sensor networks. However, sensor nodes have limited resources. Thus, it is necessary to adapt the increase in sampling frequency for different crops, under application constraints (reliability, packet delay, and lifetime duration). In this paper, we propose to properly tune IEEE 802.15.4 MAC parameters (macMinBE and macMaxCSMABackoffs) and the sampling frequency of deployed sensor nodes. An analytical model of network performance is derived and used to perform the tuning of these tradeoff parameters. Simulation analysis shows that our scheme provides an efficient increase of sampling frequency of sensor nodes while satisfying application requirements.
Koné et al. (Fri,) studied this question.