2,324 research outputs found

    Global Optimization of Weighted Sum-Rate for Downlink Heterogeneous Cellular Networks

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    It is envisioned that Heterogeneous cellular network is key technology in 5G that can be used to meet the ever increasing demand of data rate. The most critical problem of HetNet is interference. One of our objectives is to design beamformers to mitigate interference and achieve the maximum throughput while satisfying some power and interference constraints. In this paper we are able to determine the global solution of the non-convex NP-hard weighted sum-rate problem using branch and bound method. It involves searching for the best individual rates among many feasible rates achievable in the system that maximizes the weighted sum-rate of the system while fulfilling the power and interference constraints. Results obtained show that our proposed method outperformed other methods such as egoistic beamforming method and the relaxed convex optimization heuristic method which produces sub-optimal solution to the original non-convex problem

    Joint Beamforming and Power Control in Coordinated Multicell: Max-Min Duality, Effective Network and Large System Transition

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    This paper studies joint beamforming and power control in a coordinated multicell downlink system that serves multiple users per cell to maximize the minimum weighted signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio. The optimal solution and distributed algorithm with geometrically fast convergence rate are derived by employing the nonlinear Perron-Frobenius theory and the multicell network duality. The iterative algorithm, though operating in a distributed manner, still requires instantaneous power update within the coordinated cluster through the backhaul. The backhaul information exchange and message passing may become prohibitive with increasing number of transmit antennas and increasing number of users. In order to derive asymptotically optimal solution, random matrix theory is leveraged to design a distributed algorithm that only requires statistical information. The advantage of our approach is that there is no instantaneous power update through backhaul. Moreover, by using nonlinear Perron-Frobenius theory and random matrix theory, an effective primal network and an effective dual network are proposed to characterize and interpret the asymptotic solution.Comment: Some typos in the version publised in the IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications are correcte

    Delay Minimizing User Association in Cellular Networks via Hierarchically Well-Separated Trees

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    We study downlink delay minimization within the context of cellular user association policies that map mobile users to base stations. We note the delay minimum user association problem fits within a broader class of network utility maximization and can be posed as a non-convex quadratic program. This non-convexity motivates a split quadratic objective function that captures the original problem's inherent tradeoff: association with a station that provides the highest signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) vs. a station that is least congested. We find the split-term formulation is amenable to linearization by embedding the base stations in a hierarchically well-separated tree (HST), which offers a linear approximation with constant distortion. We provide a numerical comparison of several problem formulations and find that with appropriate optimization parameter selection, the quadratic reformulation produces association policies with sum delays that are close to that of the original network utility maximization. We also comment on the more difficult problem when idle base stations (those without associated users) are deactivated.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Submitted on 2013-10-03 to the 2015 IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC). Accepted on 2015-01-09 to the 2015 IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC

    Joint Downlink Base Station Association and Power Control for Max-Min Fairness: Computation and Complexity

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    In a heterogeneous network (HetNet) with a large number of low power base stations (BSs), proper user-BS association and power control is crucial to achieving desirable system performance. In this paper, we systematically study the joint BS association and power allocation problem for a downlink cellular network under the max-min fairness criterion. First, we show that this problem is NP-hard. Second, we show that the upper bound of the optimal value can be easily computed, and propose a two-stage algorithm to find a high-quality suboptimal solution. Simulation results show that the proposed algorithm is near-optimal in the high-SNR regime. Third, we show that the problem under some additional mild assumptions can be solved to global optima in polynomial time by a semi-distributed algorithm. This result is based on a transformation of the original problem to an assignment problem with gains log(gij)\log(g_{ij}), where {gij}\{g_{ij}\} are the channel gains.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures, a shorter version submitted to IEEE JSA
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