519 research outputs found

    Cooperative control of relay based cellular networks

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    PhDThe increasing popularity of wireless communications and the higher data requirements of new types of service lead to higher demands on wireless networks. Relay based cellular networks have been seen as an effective way to meet users’ increased data rate requirements while still retaining the benefits of a cellular structure. However, maximizing the probability of providing service and spectrum efficiency are still major challenges for network operators and engineers because of the heterogeneous traffic demands, hard-to-predict user movements and complex traffic models. In a mobile network, load balancing is recognised as an efficient way to increase the utilization of limited frequency spectrum at reasonable costs. Cooperative control based on geographic load balancing is employed to provide flexibility for relay based cellular networks and to respond to changes in the environment. According to the potential capability of existing antenna systems, adaptive radio frequency domain control in the physical layer is explored to provide coverage at the right place at the right time. This thesis proposes several effective and efficient approaches to improve spectrum efficiency using network wide optimization to coordinate the coverage offered by different network components according to the antenna models and relay station capability. The approaches include tilting of antenna sectors, changing the power of omni-directional antennas, and changing the assignment of relay stations to different base stations. Experiments show that the proposed approaches offer significant improvements and robustness in heterogeneous traffic scenarios and when the propagation environment changes. The issue of predicting the consequence of cooperative decisions regarding antenna configurations when applied in a realistic environment is described, and a coverage prediction model is proposed. The consequences of applying changes to the antenna configuration on handovers are analysed in detail. The performance evaluations are based on a system level simulator in the context of Mobile WiMAX technology, but the concepts apply more generally

    Energy-efficiency for MISO-OFDMA based user-relay assisted cellular networks

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    The concept of improving energy-efficiency (EE) without sacrificing the service quality has become important nowadays. The combination of orthogonal frequency-division multiple-access (OFDMA) multi-antenna transmission technology and relaying is one of the key technologies to deliver the promise of reliable and high-data-rate coverage in the most cost-effective manner. In this paper, EE is studied for the downlink multiple-input single-output (MISO)-OFDMA based user-relay assisted cellular networks. EE maximization is formulated for decode and forward (DF) relaying scheme with the consideration of both transmit and circuit power consumption as well as the data rate requirements for the mobile users. The quality of-service (QoS)-constrained EE maximization, which is defined for multi-carrier, multi-user, multi-relay and multi-antenna networks, is a non-convex and combinatorial problem so it is hard to tackle. To solve this difficult problem, a radio resource management (RRM) algorithm that solves the subcarrier allocation, mode selection and power allocation separately is proposed. The efficiency of the proposed algorithm is demonstrated by numerical results for different system parameter

    Spectrally and Energy Efficient Radio Resource Management for Multi-Operator Shared Networks

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    Commercial mobile communication systems are mainly based on licensed frequency spectrum, and the license is very expensive as the spectrum is a sparse wireless resource. Therefore, sharing this wireless resource is an essential requirement not only at the present but also in the future considering trends like connectivity for everybody and everything. In this thesis, we study the sharing of wireless resources with different approaches for realizing fair, efficient, and predictable sharing solutions in a controlled manner. The efficient use of wireless channel resources is an important target to reduce the costs of network operation and deployment. To achieve this, we need practical scheduling algorithms for wireless resources, out of which several of them will be presented and analyzed in this work. Different optimization frameworks for the spectral efficiency utility are presented, with an individual focus on guaranteeing resource or rate fairness among the operators in a network with shared radio resources. Thus, the presented proposals will help the mobile network operators to overcome the issues of losing network control and traceability of used wireless resources in a shared environment. Besides this, emerging vertical industries, such as automotive, healthcare, industry 4.0, internet of things (IoT) industries will put a certain burden on the wireless networks asking for guaranteed service level requirement from the mobile network operators. In this regard, this thesis provides the necessary methods addressing these challenges with the help of scheduling methods which are based on the joint optimization of spectral and energy efficiency. Thus, wireless networks will be enabled as a service function in a controlled and scalable way for new emerging markets. Furthermore, the presented solutions t well with the requirements of fifth generation (5G) network slicing

    Joint Scheduling for Multi-Service in Coordinated Multi-Point OFDMA Networks

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    In this paper, the issues upon user scheduling in the downlink packet transmission for multiple services are addressed for coordinated multi-point (CoMP) OFDMA networks. We consider mixed traffic with voice over IP (VOIP) and best effort (BE) services. In order to improve cell-edge performance and guarantee diverse quality of service (QoS), a utility-based joint scheduling algorithm is proposed, which consists of two steps: ant colony optimization (ACO) based joint user selection and greedy subchannel assignment. We compare the proposed algorithm with the greedy user selection (GUC) based scheme. Via simulation results, we show that 95% of BE users are satsified with average cell-edge data rate greater than 200kbps by using either of the two algorithms. Whereas, our proposed algorithm ensures that more than 95% of VoIP users are satisfied with packet drop ratio less than 2%, compared to 78% by the GUC based algorithm

    Traffic Scheduling in Software-defined Backhaul Network

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    In the past few years, severe challenges have arisen for network operators, as explosive growth and service differentiation in data demands require an increasing number of network capacity as well as dynamic traffic management. To adapt to the network densification, wireless backhaul solution is attracting more and more attentions due to its flexible deployment. Meanwhile, the software-defined network (SDN) proposes an promising architecture that can achieve dynamic control and management for various functionalities. In this case, by applying the SDN architecture to wireless backhaul networks, the traffic scheduling functionality may satisfy the ever-increasing and differentiated traffic demands. To tackle the traffic demand challenges, traffic scheduling for software-defined backhaul networks (SDBN) is investigated from three aspects in this thesis. In the first aspect, various virtual networks based on service types are embedded to the same wireless backhaul infrastructure. An algorithm, named VNE-SDBN, is proposed to solve the virtual network embedding (VNE) problem to improve the performance of the revenue of infrastructure providers and virtual network request acceptance ratio by exploiting the unique characteristics of SDBNs. In the second aspect, incoming traffic is scheduled online by joint routing and resource allocation approach in backhaul networks operated in low-frequency microwave (LFM) and those operated in millimetre wave (mmW). A digraph-based greedy algorithm (DBGA) is proposed considering the relationship between the degrees of vertices in the constructed interference digraph and system throughput with low complexity. In the third aspect, quality-of-service is provided in terms of delay and throughput with two proposed algorithms for backhaul networks with insufficient spectral resources. At last, as a trial research on E-band, a conceptual adaptive modulation system with channel estimation based on rain rate for E-band SDBN is proposed to exploit the rain attenuation feature of E-band. The results of the research works are mainly achieved through heuristic algorithms. Genetic algorithm, which is a meta-heuristic algorithm, is employed to obtain near-optimal solutions to the proposed NP-hard problems. Low complexity greedy algorithms are developed based on the specific problem analysis. Finally, the evaluation of proposed systems and algorithms are performed through numerical simulations. Simulations for backhaul networks with respect to VNE, routing and resource allocation are developed

    A Survey on Delay-Aware Resource Control for Wireless Systems --- Large Deviation Theory, Stochastic Lyapunov Drift and Distributed Stochastic Learning

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    In this tutorial paper, a comprehensive survey is given on several major systematic approaches in dealing with delay-aware control problems, namely the equivalent rate constraint approach, the Lyapunov stability drift approach and the approximate Markov Decision Process (MDP) approach using stochastic learning. These approaches essentially embrace most of the existing literature regarding delay-aware resource control in wireless systems. They have their relative pros and cons in terms of performance, complexity and implementation issues. For each of the approaches, the problem setup, the general solution and the design methodology are discussed. Applications of these approaches to delay-aware resource allocation are illustrated with examples in single-hop wireless networks. Furthermore, recent results regarding delay-aware multi-hop routing designs in general multi-hop networks are elaborated. Finally, the delay performance of the various approaches are compared through simulations using an example of the uplink OFDMA systems.Comment: 58 pages, 8 figures; IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 201
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