13 research outputs found

    Open, Closed, and Shared Access Femtocells in the Downlink

    Full text link
    A fundamental choice in femtocell deployments is the set of users which are allowed to access each femtocell. Closed access restricts the set to specifically registered users, while open access allows any mobile subscriber to use any femtocell. Which one is preferable depends strongly on the distance between the macrocell base station (MBS) and femtocell. The main results of the paper are lemmas which provide expressions for the SINR distribution for various zones within a cell as a function of this MBS-femto distance. The average sum throughput (or any other SINR-based metric) of home users and cellular users under open and closed access can be readily determined from these expressions. We show that unlike in the uplink, the interests of home and cellular users are in conflict, with home users preferring closed access and cellular users preferring open access. The conflict is most pronounced for femtocells near the cell edge, when there are many cellular users and fewer femtocells. To mitigate this conflict, we propose a middle way which we term shared access in which femtocells allocate an adjustable number of time-slots between home and cellular users such that a specified minimum rate for each can be achieved. The optimal such sharing fraction is derived. Analysis shows that shared access achieves at least the overall throughput of open access while also satisfying rate requirements, while closed access fails for cellular users and open access fails for the home user.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communication

    Efficient Measurement Procedure for Access Control to Maximizing Throughput in LTE Femtocell Networks

    Get PDF
    LTE networks are becoming more and more popular nowadays. There are two main problems in implementing LTE networks - coverage and capacity. Both these problems can be solved by deploying femtocells in LTE networks. Femtocells can enhance the capacity and offload traffic from Macrocell networks. There are several issues that must be taken into consideration for the successful deployment of Femtocells. One of the most important issues is mobility management. Since Femtocells will b e deployed densely, randomly, and by the millions, providing and sup porting seamless mobility procedures is essential. Proposed an approach to handle mobility management with access control for several femtocells

    Performance analysis of resource scheduling in LTE femtocell with hybrid access mode

    Get PDF
    Femtocell is a promising technology that intends in solving the indoor coverage problems so as to enhance the cell capacity. The overall network performance, in turn depends on the access methods used by the femtocells. The access method is used to identify about the user’s connectivity with the femtocell network. There are three access mechanisms defined in Third Generation partnership Project (3GPP) specification for Long Term Evolution (LTE) femtocells: open, closed and hybrid access mechanisms. Hybrid access mechanism is mostly preferred by the network for the effective utilization of resources. But, it is important to regulate the proper scheduling scheme for them. In this paper, scheduling in femtocell is investigated, where, among the non subscribers, preference is given to the users who have high throughput priority metric, thereby increasing overall throughput of the network

    Multi-channel Hybrid Access Femtocells: A Stochastic Geometric Analysis

    Full text link
    For two-tier networks consisting of macrocells and femtocells, the channel access mechanism can be configured to be open access, closed access, or hybrid access. Hybrid access arises as a compromise between open and closed access mechanisms, in which a fraction of available spectrum resource is shared to nonsubscribers while the remaining reserved for subscribers. This paper focuses on a hybrid access mechanism for multi-channel femtocells which employ orthogonal spectrum access schemes. Considering a randomized channel assignment strategy, we analyze the performance in the downlink. Using stochastic geometry as technical tools, we model the distribution of femtocells as Poisson point process or Neyman-Scott cluster process and derive the distributions of signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratios, and mean achievable rates, of both nonsubscribers and subscribers. The established expressions are amenable to numerical evaluation, and shed key insights into the performance tradeoff between subscribers and nonsubscribers. The analytical results are corroborated by numerical simulations.Comment: This is the final version, which was accepted in IEEE Transactions on Communication

    Performance Evaluation and Packet Scheduling in HeNB Deployments

    Get PDF
    The unsupervised and chaotic deployment of Home eNBs (HeNBs) is leading to high levels of interference. To understand the behaviour of the interference of these uncoordinated deployments is vital to reach significant capacity improvement and also to explore opportunities to save energy. This paper considers high and middle interference level scenarios, with a maximum of four users per cell. HeNBs indoor deployed is considered within building. We theoretically analyse the traffic performance of this scenario through the study of the Signal-to-Interference-plus-Noise-Ratio (SINR). Through the use of the LTE-Sim simulator one obtains the quality indicators for two flows that are being utilised by the users. Video and best effort are studied, while varying the transmitter power and the areas of the apartments. The achieved SINR is higher (around 10 dBm) when the area of the cells is smaller. The variation of the transmitter power of the HeNBs does not present any significant impact. Noticeable throughout the simulations is observed that is possible to operate the system without setting the transmitter power of HeNBs to the maximum value at both interference levels. Simulation results also show that with the considered flows is possible to serve the maximum number of four users per HeNB with high quality. This statement is confirmed by the maximum achieved Packet Loss Ratio for video with a value of value of 1.6 %, which is lower than the maximum of 2 % indicated by the 3GPP. Taking into account the obtained results it is possible to promote a reduction in energy consumption of the HeNBs without penalizing the service quality.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Auction based competition of hybrid small cells for dropped macrocell users

    Get PDF
    We propose an auction based beamforming and user association algorithm for a wireless network consisting of a macrocell and multiple small cell access points (SCAs). The SCAs compete for serving the macrocell base station (MBS) users (MUs). The corresponding user association problem is solved by the proposed bid-wait auction (BWA) method. We considered two scenarios. In the first scenario, the MBS initially admits the largest possible set of MUs that it can serve simultaneously and then auctions off the remaining MUs to the SCAs, who are willing to admit guest users (GUs) in addition to their commitments to serve their own host users (HUs). This problem is solved by the proposed forward bid-wait auction (FBWA). In the second scenario, the MBS aims to offload as many MUs as possible to the SCAs and then admits the largest possible set of remaining MUs. This is solved by the proposed backward bid-wait auction (BBWA). The proposed algorithms provide close to optimum solution as if obtained using a centralised global optimization

    Dynamic Resource Allocation in Hybrid Access Femtocell Network

    Get PDF
    Intercell interference is one of the most challenging issues in femtocell deployment under the coverage of existing macrocell. Allocation of resources between femtocell and macrocell is essential to counter the effects of interference in dense femtocell networks. Advances in resource management strategies have improved the control mechanism for interference reduction at lower node density, but most of them are ineffective at higher node density. In this paper, a dynamic resource allocation management algorithm (DRAMA) for spectrum shared hybrid access OFDMA femtocell network is proposed. To reduce the macro-femtotier interference and to improve the quality of service, the proposed algorithm features a dynamic resource allocation scheme by controlling them both centrally and locally. The proposed scheme focuses on Femtocell Access Point (FAP) owners' satisfaction and allows maximum utilization of available resources based on congestion in the network. A simulation environment is developed to study the quantitative performance of DRAMA in hybrid access-control femtocell network and compare it to closed and open access mechanisms. The performance analysis shows that higher number of random users gets connected to the FAP without compromising FAP owners' satisfaction allowing the macrocell to offload a large number of users in a dense heterogeneous network

    A Robust Speed-Based Handover Algorithm for Dense Femtocell/Macrocell LTE-A Network and Beyond

    Get PDF
    Femtocells are currently being deployed in the present generation of cellular networks because of their ability to provide increased data rate at home and offices. This development together with the recent advances in technology brings about a huge increment in bandwidth required to meet the future demand for data by the ever increasing mobile devices. It is envisaged that with dense deployment of femtocells, the present challenge in terms of data requirement as well as the future demand will be met. Therefore, it is imperative to intensify the research in the area of handover management in femtocell/macrocell integrated network using a high dense network scenario that will dominate the future network. Presently, most research works in this area do not focus much on a dense deployment of mobile users in a femtocell/macrocell integrated network. Also, many existing handover algorithms were not designed to work in a highly mobile and dense environment. In this work, the authors propose a robust CAC handover algorithm for a dense femtocell/macrocell LTEAdvanced integrated network. The proposed CAC algorithm is efficient to handle calls in a highly dense and mobile user environment. The simulation results of the proposed algorithm show that the handover call dropping probability, call blocking probability and handover probability are considerably reduced

    Auction‐based competition of hybrid small cells for dropped macrocell users

    Get PDF
    This is an open access article published by the IET under the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)We propose an auction based beamforming and user association algorithm for a wireless network consisting of a macrocell and multiple small cell access points (SCAs). The SCAs compete for serving the macrocell base station (MBS) users (MUs). The corresponding user association problem is solved by the proposed bid-wait auction (BWA) method. We considered two scenarios. In the first scenario, the MBS initially admits the largest possible set of MUs that it can serve simultaneously and then auctions off the remaining MUs to the SCAs, who are willing to admit guest users (GUs) in addition to their commitments to serve their own host users (HUs). This problem is solved by the proposed forward bid-wait auction (FBWA). In the second scenario, the MBS aims to offload as many MUs as possible to the SCAs and then admits the largest possible set of remaining MUs. This is solved by the proposed backward bid-wait auction (BBWA). The proposed algorithms provide close to optimum solution as if obtained using a centralised global optimization
    corecore