43,524 research outputs found
Energy Efficient User Association and Power Allocation in Millimeter Wave Based Ultra Dense Networks with Energy Harvesting Base Stations
Millimeter wave (mmWave) communication technologies have recently emerged as
an attractive solution to meet the exponentially increasing demand on mobile
data traffic. Moreover, ultra dense networks (UDNs) combined with mmWave
technology are expected to increase both energy efficiency and spectral
efficiency. In this paper, user association and power allocation in mmWave
based UDNs is considered with attention to load balance constraints, energy
harvesting by base stations, user quality of service requirements, energy
efficiency, and cross-tier interference limits. The joint user association and
power optimization problem is modeled as a mixed-integer programming problem,
which is then transformed into a convex optimization problem by relaxing the
user association indicator and solved by Lagrangian dual decomposition. An
iterative gradient user association and power allocation algorithm is proposed
and shown to converge rapidly to an optimal point. The complexity of the
proposed algorithm is analyzed and the effectiveness of the proposed scheme
compared with existing methods is verified by simulations.Comment: to appear, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 201
Self Organizing strategies for enhanced ICIC (eICIC)
Small cells have been identified as an effective solution for coping with the
important traffic increase that is expected in the coming years. But this
solution is accompanied by additional interference that needs to be mitigated.
The enhanced Inter Cell Interference Coordination (eICIC) feature has been
introduced to address the interference problem. eICIC involves two parameters
which need to be optimized, namely the Cell Range Extension (CRE) of the small
cells and the ABS ratio (ABSr) which defines a mute ratio for the macro cell to
reduce the interference it produces. In this paper we propose self-optimizing
algorithms for the eICIC. The CRE is adjusted by means of load balancing
algorithm. The ABSr parameter is optimized by maximizing a proportional fair
utility of user throughputs. The convergence of the algorithms is proven using
stochastic approximation theorems. Numerical simulations illustrate the
important performance gain brought about by the different algorithms.Comment: Submitted to WiOpt 201
Evaluator services for optimised service placement in distributed heterogeneous cloud infrastructures
Optimal placement of demanding real-time interactive applications in a distributed heterogeneous cloud very quickly results in a complex tradeoff between the application constraints and resource capabilities. This requires very detailed information of the various requirements and capabilities of the applications and available resources. In this paper, we present a mathematical model for the service optimization problem and study the concept of evaluator services as a flexible and efficient solution for this complex problem. An evaluator service is a service probe that is deployed in particular runtime environments to assess the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of deploying a specific application in such environment. We discuss how this concept can be incorporated in a general framework such as the FUSION architecture and discuss the key benefits and tradeoffs for doing evaluator-based optimal service placement in widely distributed heterogeneous cloud environments
A novel load-balancing scheme for cellular-WLAN heterogeneous systems with cell-breathing technique
This paper proposes a novel load-balancing scheme for an operator-deployed cellular-wireless local area network (WLAN) heterogeneous network (HetNet), where the user association is controlled by employing a cell-breathing technique for the WLAN network. This scheme eliminates the complex coordination and additional signaling overheads between the users and the network by allowing the users to simply associate with the available WLAN networks similar to the traditional WLAN-first association, without making complex association decisions. Thus, this scheme can be easily implemented in an existing operator-deployed cellular-WLAN HetNet. The performance of the proposed scheme is evaluated in terms of load distribution between cellular and WLAN networks, user fairness, and system throughput, which demonstrates the superiority of the proposed scheme in load distribution and user fairness, while optimizing the system throughput. In addition, a cellular-WLAN interworking architecture and signaling procedures are proposed for implementing the proposed load-balancing schemes in an operator-deployed cellular-WLAN HetNet
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