1,365 research outputs found

    A survey of self organisation in future cellular networks

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    This article surveys the literature over the period of the last decade on the emerging field of self organisation as applied to wireless cellular communication networks. Self organisation has been extensively studied and applied in adhoc networks, wireless sensor networks and autonomic computer networks; however in the context of wireless cellular networks, this is the first attempt to put in perspective the various efforts in form of a tutorial/survey. We provide a comprehensive survey of the existing literature, projects and standards in self organising cellular networks. Additionally, we also aim to present a clear understanding of this active research area, identifying a clear taxonomy and guidelines for design of self organising mechanisms. We compare strength and weakness of existing solutions and highlight the key research areas for further development. This paper serves as a guide and a starting point for anyone willing to delve into research on self organisation in wireless cellular communication networks

    Imperfect Digital Fibre Optic Link Based Cooperative Distributed Antennas with Fractional Frequency Reuse in Multicell Multiuser Networks

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    The achievable throughput of the entire cellular area is investigated, when employing fractional frequency reuse techniques in conjunction with realistically modelled imperfect optical fibre aided distributed antenna systems (DAS) operating in a multicell multiuser scenario. Given a fixed total transmit power, a substantial improvement of the cell-edge area's throughput can be achieved without reducing the cell-centre's throughput. The cell-edge's throughput supported in the worst-case direction is significantly enhanced by the cooperative linear transmit processing technique advocated. Explicitly, a cell-edge throughput of η=5\eta=5 bits/s/Hz may be maintained for an imperfect optical fibre model, regardless of the specific geographic distribution of the users

    A Survey of Self Organisation in Future Cellular Networks

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    Overview of interference management techniques in Femtocell networks : challenges and approach.

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    The most important use of techniques for the new technology network called femtocell, is to improve coverage and enhance capacity in mobile network. However, the deployment of femtocell over macrocell network has a new technology has attracted benefits in telecommunication industry. Several technical challenges toward the mass deployment of these new technology called femtocell have been addressed in industry. Interference mitigation between femtocell and macrocell, and among the neighboring femtocell user, is considered to be one of the major issues in femtocell networks due to sharing the same licensed frequency spectrum with macrocell. In this paper, we provide different techniques schemes for interference mitigation and general view for the efficiency of interference management techniques in femtocell network

    Adaptive Bit Partitioning for Multicell Intercell Interference Nulling with Delayed Limited Feedback

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    Base station cooperation can exploit knowledge of the users' channel state information (CSI) at the transmitters to manage co-channel interference. Users have to feedback CSI of the desired and interfering channels using finite-bandwidth backhaul links. Existing codebook designs for single-cell limited feedback can be used for multicell cooperation by partitioning the available feedback resources between the multiple channels. In this paper, a new feedback-bit allocation strategy is proposed, as a function of the delays in the communication links and received signal strengths in the downlink. Channel temporal correlation is modeled as a function of delay using the Gauss-Markov model. Closed-form expressions for bit partitions are derived to allocate more bits to quantize the stronger channels with smaller delays and fewer bits to weaker channels with larger delays, assuming random vector quantization. Cellular network simulations are used to show that the proposed algorithm yields higher sum-rates than an equal-bit allocation technique.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, July 201
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