dc.description.abstract | NATO is in the process of finishing edition 1 of the narrowband waveform (NBWF) STANAGs
5630 to 5633. NBWF provides ground-to-ground communication between troops/platforms at the
tactical battlefield using the military VHF and UHF band (30 – 500 MHz). NBWF is a singlechannel
mobile ad-hoc radio network (MANET) which shall serve voice and data traffic using
radio frequency (RF) bandwidth less than 100 kHz, primarily 25 kHz.
FFI has participated in the NBWF standardisation activity for a number of years, and many
simulation experiments have been executed to analyse different technical solutions. In our earlier
simulation experiments, we analysed simple NBWF networks with few radio nodes. Now we
extend the network size (number of nodes) and use scenarios with more demanding radio
conditions. The experimental results obtained through simulations did not discover any
anomalous behaviour of the NBWF protocols. As a network increases in size, the routing traffic
increases also. The simulator used did not model the NBWF routing protocols, but used static
routing. We expect that the routing protocol is the protocol that would be the major obstacle to
deploy large networks.
As an NBWF network turns from a fully meshed topology with single-hop traffic to a multi-hop
scenario with hidden nodes, the NBWF protocol efficiency decreases. By gradually decreasing
the radio range, we illustrated how the network throughput decreases with reduced radio
coverage. Multi-hop IP-streams consume more transmission capacity than single-hop IP-streams
and therefore, the network throughput must decrease. The simulation experiments showed that it
is the medium access reservation protocol that gets the toughest operating conditions in the
scenarios analysed due to the hidden node problem. | en_GB |