230 research outputs found

    A Spatial Estimation-based Handover Management For Challenging Femtocell Deployments

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    Tez (Yüksek Lisans) -- İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü, 2015Thesis (M.Sc.) -- İstanbul Technical University, Instıtute of Science and Technology, 2015Bu çalışmada, femtocell tabanlı ağlarda gereksiz aktarım sayısını düşürmeye yönelik, mobil kullanıcıların sinyal kaybı raporlarını kullanarak yeni bir aktarım yönetim mekanizması tasarlanmıştır. Tasarlanan mekanizmada sinyal kaybı değerlerini uzaysal olarak kestirebilmek için semivariogram analizi yapan Ordinary Kriging yöntemleri kullanmaktadır. Bu yöntem iki kısımdan oluşmaktadır. İlk olarak yeni tanımlanan sinyal kaybı değişkeni hesaplanır ve sonrasında bu değer önceden tanımlanan eşik değeri ile kıyaslanarak aktarım kararı alınır. Yeni tanımlanan sinyal kaybı değişkeni mobil kullanıcının gelecekte bulunacağı noktaların sinyal kaybı değişkenine dayanmaktadır. Sayısal veriler önerilen yöntemin geleneksel yönteme göre gereksiz aktarım sayısı ve ping-pong aktarım oranı anlamında daha iyi sonuçlar verdiği görülmüştür.In this study, a new path loss-based handover management mechanism is introduced in order to minimize the number of unnecessary handovers in femtocell-based networks by using path loss measurement reports from mobile stations. The proposed mechanism includes a spatial estimation of path loss step that depends on ordinary Kriging using Semivariogram Analysis. This method is composed of two parts. First calculate mobile station's newly defined path loss and then compare this value with the predefined threshold to make a handover decision. The newly defined path loss is calculated by considering the path loss of future locations which are the locations that the mobile station will most likely reach in the future. Numerical results demonstrate that the proposed handover scheme is superior to conventional handover scheme from the viewpoints of both unnecessary handover number and ping-pong handover rate.Yüksek LisansM.Sc

    Models and optimisation methods for interference coordination in self-organising cellular networks

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    A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of PhilosophyWe are at that moment of network evolution when we have realised that our telecommunication systems should mimic features of human kind, e.g., the ability to understand the medium and take advantage of its changes. Looking towards the future, the mobile industry envisions the use of fully automatised cells able to self-organise all their parameters and procedures. A fully self-organised network is the one that is able to avoid human involvement and react to the fluctuations of network, traffic and channel through the automatic/autonomous nature of its functioning. Nowadays, the mobile community is far from this fully self-organised kind of network, but they are taken the first steps to achieve this target in the near future. This thesis hopes to contribute to the automatisation of cellular networks, providing models and tools to understand the behaviour of these networks, and algorithms and optimisation approaches to enhance their performance. This work focuses on the next generation of cellular networks, in more detail, in the DownLink (DL) of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) based networks. Within this type of cellular system, attention is paid to interference mitigation in self-organising macrocell scenarios and femtocell deployments. Moreover, this thesis investigates the interference issues that arise when these two cell types are jointly deployed, complementing each other in what is currently known as a two-tier network. This thesis also provides new practical approaches to the inter-cell interference problem in both macro cell and femtocell OFDMA systems as well as in two-tier networks by means of the design of a novel framework and the use of mathematical optimisation. Special attention is paid to the formulation of optimisation problems and the development of well-performing solving methods (accurate and fast)

    Localization and mobility management in heterogeneous wireless networks with network-assistance

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    The nowadays heterogeneous wireless network (HWN) is a collection of ubiquitous wireless networking elements (WNEs) that support diverse functional capabilities and networking purposes. In such a heterogeneous networking environment, localization and mobility management will play a key role for the seamless support of emerging applications, such as social networking, massive multiplayer online gaming, device-todevice (D2D) communications, smart metering, first-responder communications, and unsupervised navigation of communication-aware robotic nodes. Since most of the existing wireless networking technologies enable the WNEs to assess their current radio status and directly (or indirectly) estimate their relative distance and angle with respect to other WNEs of the same Radio Access Technology (RAT), the integration of such information from the ubiquitous WNEs arises as a natural solution for robustly handling localization between (not necessarily homogeneous) WNEs and mobility management of moving WNEs governed by resource-constrained operation. Under the viewpoint of investigating how the utilization of such spatial information can be used to enhance the performance of localization and mobility management in the nowadays HWN, in this work we focus and contribute in the following four research areas: i) localization and peer-discovery between non-homogeneous WNEs, ii) network-assisted D2D discovery in cellular networks, iii) energy-efficient handover (HO) decision in the macrocell – femtocell network, and iv) network-assisted vertical handover decision (VHO) for the integrated cellular and WLAN heterogeneous wireless network

    Green Femtocell Based on UWB Technologies

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