5,852 research outputs found
A Queueing Characterization of Information Transmission over Block Fading Rayleigh Channels in the Low SNR
Unlike the AWGN (additive white gaussian noise) channel, fading channels
suffer from random channel gains besides the additive Gaussian noise. As a
result, the instantaneous channel capacity varies randomly along time, which
makes it insufficient to characterize the transmission capability of a fading
channel using data rate only. In this paper, the transmission capability of a
buffer-aided block Rayleigh fading channel is examined by a constant rate input
data stream, and reflected by several parameters such as the average queue
length, stationary queue length distribution, packet delay and overflow
probability. Both infinite-buffer model and finite-buffer model are considered.
Taking advantage of the memoryless property of the service provided by the
channel in each block in the the low SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) regime, the
information transmission over the channel is formulated as a \textit{discrete
time discrete state} queueing problem. The obtained results show that
block fading channels are unable to support a data rate close to their ergodic
capacity, no matter how long the buffer is, even seen from the application
layer. For the finite-buffer model, the overflow probability is derived with
explicit expression, and is shown to decrease exponentially when buffer size is
increased, even when the buffer size is very small.Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures. More details on the proof of Theorem 1 and
proposition 1 can be found in "Queueing analysis for block fading Rayleigh
channels in the low SNR regime ", IEEE WCSP 2013.It has been published by
IEEE Trans. on Veh. Technol. in Feb. 201
Wireless Network Control with Privacy Using Hybrid ARQ
We consider the problem of resource allocation in a wireless cellular
network, in which nodes have both open and private information to be
transmitted to the base station over block fading uplink channels. We develop a
cross-layer solution, based on hybrid ARQ transmission with incremental
redundancy. We provide a scheme that combines power control, flow control, and
scheduling in order to maximize a global utility function, subject to the
stability of the data queues, an average power constraint, and a constraint on
the privacy outage probability. Our scheme is based on the assumption that each
node has an estimate of its uplink channel gain at each block, while only the
distribution of the cross channel gains is available. We prove that our scheme
achieves a utility, arbitrarily close to the maximum achievable utility given
the available channel state information
Energy and bursty packet loss tradeoff over fading channels: a system-level model
Energy efficiency and quality of service (QoS) guarantees are the key design goals for the 5G wireless communication systems. In this context, we discuss a multiuser scheduling scheme over fading channels for loss tolerant applications. The loss tolerance of the application is characterized in terms of different parameters that contribute to quality of experience (QoE) for the application. The mobile users are scheduled opportunistically such that a minimum QoS is guaranteed. We propose an opportunistic scheduling scheme and address the cross-layer design framework when channel state information (CSI) is not perfectly available at the transmitter and the receiver. We characterize the system energy as a function of different QoS and channel state estimation error parameters. The optimization problem is formulated using Markov chain framework and solved using stochastic optimization techniques. The results demonstrate that the parameters characterizing the packet loss are tightly coupled and relaxation of one parameter does not benefit the system much if the other constraints are tight. We evaluate the energy-performance tradeoff numerically and show the effect of channel uncertainty on the packet scheduler design
Adaptive Modulation and Coding and Cooperative ARQ in a Cognitive Radio System
In this paper, a joint cross-layer design of adaptive modulation and coding
(AMC) and cooperative automatic repeat request (C-ARQ) scheme is proposed for a
secondary user in a shared-spectrum environment. First, based on the
statistical descriptions of the channel, closed-form expressions of the average
spectral efficiency (SE) and the average packet loss rate (PLR) are presented.
Then, the cross-layer scheme is designed, with the aim of maximizing the
average SE while maintaining the average PLR under a prescribed level. An
optimization problem is formed, and a sub-optimal solution is found: the target
packet error rates (PER) for the secondary system channels are obtained and the
corresponding sub-optimal AMC rate adaptation policy is derived based on the
target PERs. Finally, the average SE and the average PLR performance of the
proposed scheme are presented
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