219 research outputs found

    Effects of Correlated Shadowing Modeling on Performance Evaluation of Wireless Sensor Networks

    Get PDF

    Network level performances of a LoRa system

    Get PDF
    The demand for connected devices, according to the Internet of Things (IoT) paradigm, is expected to grow considerably in the future. The focus of this thesis is on one of the most prominent LPWAN technologies: LoRa. First, this thesis establishes a series of models that cover various aspects of a LoRa network. Then, a new Network Simulator 3 (NS3) module is introduced to simulate a LoRa-based IoT network in a typical urban scenario. Finally, the performance of the LoRa system is evaluated

    Limit theorem on the sum of identically distributed equally and positively correlated joint lognormals

    Full text link

    A base station smart antenna system for CDMA cellular

    Get PDF
    Thesis (M.Eng.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1998.Includes bibliographical references (p. 52-54).by Mark C. Roh.M.Eng

    Facilitating wireless coexistence research

    Get PDF

    Modeling, Analysis and Design for Carrier Aggregation in Heterogeneous Cellular Networks

    Full text link
    Carrier aggregation (CA) and small cells are two distinct features of next-generation cellular networks. Cellular networks with small cells take on a very heterogeneous characteristic, and are often referred to as HetNets. In this paper, we introduce a load-aware model for CA-enabled \textit{multi}-band HetNets. Under this model, the impact of biasing can be more appropriately characterized; for example, it is observed that with large enough biasing, the spectral efficiency of small cells may increase while its counterpart in a fully-loaded model always decreases. Further, our analysis reveals that the peak data rate does not depend on the base station density and transmit powers; this strongly motivates other approaches e.g. CA to increase the peak data rate. Last but not least, different band deployment configurations are studied and compared. We find that with large enough small cell density, spatial reuse with small cells outperforms adding more spectrum for increasing user rate. More generally, universal cochannel deployment typically yields the largest rate; and thus a capacity loss exists in orthogonal deployment. This performance gap can be reduced by appropriately tuning the HetNet coverage distribution (e.g. by optimizing biasing factors).Comment: submitted to IEEE Transactions on Communications, Nov. 201
    corecore