Cardei, MihaelaMacCallum, DavidCheng, XiaoyanMin, MankiJia, XiaohuaLi, DeyingDu, Ding-ZhuHung-Chang Du, David2020-09-022020-09-022002-12-08https://hdl.handle.net/11299/215540A critical aspect of applications with wireless sensor networks is network lifetime. Battery-powered sensors are usable as long as they can communicate captured data to a processing node. Sensing and communications consume energy, therefore judicious power management and scheduling caneffectively extend the operational time. One important class of wireless sensor applications consists of deployment of large number of sensors in an area for environmental monitoring. The data collected by the sensors is sent to a central node for processing. In this paper we propose an efficient method to achieve energy savings by organizing the sensor nodes into a maximum number of disjoint dominating sets (DDS) which are activated successively. Only the sensors from the active set are responsible for monitoring the target area and for disseminating the collected data. All other nodes are into a sleep mode, characterized by a low energy consumption. We define the maximum disjoint dominating sets problem and we design a heuristic that computes the sets. Theoretical analysis and performance evaluation results are presented to verify our approach.en-USWireless Sensor Networks with Energy Efficient OrganizationReport