Abstract. The use of power control in wireless networks can lead to two conflicting effects. An increase in the transmission power on a link may (i) improve the quality and thus the throughput on that link but, (ii) increase the levels of interference on other links. A decrease in the transmission power can have the opposite effects. Our primary goal in this work is to understand the implications of power control on interference and contention. We conduct experiments on an indoor mesh network. Based on analysis of our experimental data, we identify three interference scenarios: a) the overlapping case, where the aggregate throughput achievable with two overlapping links cannot be improved via power control; b) the hidden terminal case, where proper power control can primarily improve fairness and, c) the potentially disjoint case, where proper power control can enable simultaneous transmissions and thus improve throughput dramatically. We find that power control can significantly im...
Ioannis Broustis, Jakob Eriksson, Srikanth V. Kris