87 research outputs found

    Content delivery over multi-antenna wireless networks

    Get PDF
    The past few decades have witnessed unprecedented advances in information technology, which have significantly shaped the way we acquire and process information in our daily lives. Wireless communications has become the main means of access to data through mobile devices, resulting in a continuous exponential growth in wireless data traffic, mainly driven by the demand for high quality content. Various technologies have been proposed by researchers to tackle this growth in 5G and beyond, including the use of increasing number of antenna elements, integrated point-to-multipoint delivery and caching, which constitute the core of this thesis. In particular, we study non-orthogonal content delivery in multiuser multiple-input-single-output (MISO) systems. First, a joint beamforming strategy for simultaneous delivery of broadcast and unicast services is investigated, based on layered division multiplexing (LDM) as a means of superposition coding. The system performance in terms of minimum required power under prescribed quality-of-service (QoS) requirements is examined in comparison with time division multiplexing (TDM). It is demonstrated through simulations that the non-orthogonal delivery strategy based on LDM significantly outperforms the orthogonal strategy based on TDM in terms of system throughput and reliability. To facilitate efficient implementation of the LDM-based beamforming design, we further propose a dual decomposition-based distributed approach. Next, we study an efficient multicast beamforming design in cache-aided multiuser MISO systems, exploiting proactive content placement and coded delivery. It is observed that the complexity of this problem grows exponentially with the number of subfiles delivered to each user in each time slot, which itself grows exponentially with the number of users in the system. Therefore, we propose a low-complexity alternative through time-sharing that limits the number of subfiles that can be received by a user in each time slot. Moreover, a joint design of content delivery and multicast beamforming is proposed to further enhance the system performance, under the constraint on maximum number of subfiles each user can decode in each time slot. Finally, conclusions are drawn in Chapter 5, followed by an outlook for future works.Open Acces

    Reduced complexity multicast beamforming and group assignment schemes for multi-antenna coded caching

    Get PDF
    Abstract. In spite of recent advancements in wireless communication technologies and data delivery networks, it is unlikely that the speeds supported by these networks will be able to keep up with the exponentially increasing demand caused by the widespread adoption of high-speed and large-data applications. One appealing idea proposed to address this issue is coded caching, which is an innovative data delivery technique that makes use of the network’s aggregate cache rather than the individual memory available to each user. This proposed idea of coded caching helps boost the data rates by distributing cache material throughout the network and delivering independent content to many users at a time. Despite the original theoretical promises for large caching gains, in reality, coded caching suffers from severe bottlenecks that dramatically limit these gains. Some of these bottlenecks are requiring complex successive interference cancellation (SIC) at the receiver, exponential increase in subpacketization, applicability to a limited range of input parameters, and performance losses in low- and mid- signal to noise ratio (SNR) regimes. In this study, we present a novel coded caching scheme based on user grouping for cache-aided multi-input single-output (MISO) networks. One special property of this new scheme is its applicability to every set of input values for the user count (KK), transmitter-side antenna count (LL), and the global coded caching gain (tt). Moreover, for a fixed tt, this scheme can achieve theoretical sum-DoF optimality with no limitations. This strategy yields superior performance in terms of subpacketization when input parameters satisfy t+Lt+1∈N\frac{t+L}{t+1} \in \mathbb{N}. This performance boost is enabled by the underlying user grouping structure during data delivery. However, when input parameters do not comply with t+Lt+1\frac{t+L}{t+1} ∈N\in \mathbb{N}, in order to guarantee symmetry of the scheme and optimal DoF, multicast and unicast messages need to be constructed using a tree diagram, resulting in excess subpacketization and transmission count. Nevertheless, the simple receiver structure without the SIC requirement not only simplifies the implementation complexity but also enables us to use state-of-the-art methods to readily design optimized transmit beamformers maximizing the achievable symmetric rate. Finally, we use numerical analysis to compare our new proposed scheme with well-known coded caching schemes in the literature

    Coding, Multicast and Cooperation for Cache-Enabled Heterogeneous Small Cell Networks

    Get PDF
    Caching at the wireless edge is a promising approach to dealing with massive content delivery in heterogeneous wireless networks, which have high demands on backhaul. In this paper, a typical cache-enabled small cell network under heterogeneous file and network settings is considered using maximum distance separable (MDS) codes for content restructuring. Unlike those in the literature considering online settings with the assumption of perfect user request information, we estimate the joint user requests using the file popularity information and aim to minimize the long-term average backhaul load for fetching content from external storage subject to the overall cache capacity constraint by optimizing the content placement in all the cells jointly. Both multicast-aware caching and cooperative caching schemes with optimal content placement are proposed. In order to combine the advantages of multicast content delivery and cooperative content sharing, a compound caching technique, which is referred to as multicast-aware cooperative caching, is then developed. For this technique, a greedy approach and a multicast-aware in-cluster cooperative approach are proposed for the small-scale networks and large-scale networks, respectively. Mathematical analysis and simulation results are presented to illustrate the advantages of MDS codes, multicast, and cooperation in terms of reducing the backhaul requirements for cache-enabled small cell networks

    Multicast Beamformer Design for MIMO Coded Caching Systems

    Full text link
    Coded caching (CC) techniques have been shown to be conveniently applicable in multi-input multi-output (MIMO) systems. In a KK-user network with spatial multiplexing gains of LL at the transmitter and GG at every receiver, if each user can cache a fraction γ\gamma of the file library, a total number of GKγ+LGK\gamma + L data streams can be served in parallel. In this paper, we focus on improving the finite-SNR performance of MIMO-CC systems. We first consider a MIMO-CC scheme that relies only on unicasting individual data streams, and then, introduce a decomposition strategy to design a new scheme that delivers the same data streams through multicasting of GG parallel codewords. We discuss how optimized beamformers could be designed for each scheme and use numerical simulations to compare their finite-SNR performance. It is shown that while both schemes serve the same number of streams, multicasting provides notable performance improvements. This is because, with multicasting, transmission vectors are built with fewer beamformers, leading to more efficient usage of available power resources

    Spectral and Energy Efficiency Maximization for Content-Centric C-RANs with Edge Caching

    Get PDF
    This paper aims to maximize the spectral and energy efficiencies of a content-centric cloud radio access network (C-RAN), where users requesting the same contents are grouped together. Data are transferred from a central baseband unit to multiple remote radio heads (RRHs) equipped with local caches. The RRHs then send the received data to each group's user. Both multicast and unicast schemes are considered for data transmission. We formulate mixed-integer nonlinear problems in which user association, RRH activation, data rate allocation, and signal precoding are jointly designed. These challenging problems are subject to minimum data rate requirements, limited fronthaul capacity, and maximum RRH transmit power. Employing successive convex quadratic programming, we propose iterative algorithms with guaranteed convergence to Fritz John solutions. Numerical results confirm that the proposed joint designs markedly improve the spectral and energy efficiencies of the considered content-centric C-RAN compared to benchmark schemes. Importantly, they show that unicasting outperforms multicasting in terms of spectral efficiency in both cache and cache-less scenarios. In terms of energy efficiency, multicasting is the best choice for the system without cache whereas unicasting is best for the system with cache. Finally, edge caching is shown to improve both spectral and energy efficiencies.This work is supported in part by an ECRHDR scholarship from The University of Newcastle, in part by the Australian Research Council Discovery Project grants DP170100939 and DP160101537

    Optimizing Resource Allocation with Energy Efficiency and Backhaul Challenges

    Get PDF
    To meet the requirements of future wireless mobile communication which aims to increase the data rates, coverage and reliability while reducing energy consumption and latency, and also deal with the explosive mobile traffic growth which imposes high demands on backhaul for massive content delivery, developing green communication and reducing the backhaul requirements have become two significant trends. One of the promising techniques to provide green communication is wireless power transfer (WPT) which facilitates energy-efficient architectures, e.g. simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT). Edge caching, on the other side, brings content closer to the users by storing popular content in caches installed at the network edge to reduce peak-time traffic, backhaul cost and latency. In this thesis, we focus on the resource allocation technology for emerging network architectures, i.e. the SWIPT-enabled multiple-antenna systems and cache-enabled cellular systems, to tackle the challenges of limited resources such as insufficient energy supply and backhaul capacity. We start with the joint design of beamforming and power transfer ratios for SWIPT in MISO broadcast channels and MIMO relay systems, respectively, aiming for maximizing the energy efficiency subject to both the Quality of Service (QoS) constraints and energy harvesting constraints. Then move to the content placement optimization for cache-enabled heterogeneous small cell networks so as to minimize the backhaul requirements. In particular, we enable multicast content delivery and cooperative content sharing utilizing maximum distance separable (MDS) codes to provide further caching gains. Both analysis and simulation results are provided throughout the thesis to demonstrate the benefits of the proposed algorithms over the state-of-the-art methods
    • …
    corecore