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    Opportunistic nonorthogonal packet scheduling in fixed broadband wireless access networks

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    In order to mitigate high cochannel interference resulting from dense channel reuse, the interference management issues are often considered as essential part of scheduling schemes in fixed br

    Opportunistic Nonorthogonal Packet Scheduling in Fixed Broadband Wireless Access Networks

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    <p/> <p>In order to mitigate high cochannel interference resulting from dense channel reuse, the interference management issues are often considered as essential part of scheduling schemes in <it>fixed broadband wireless access</it> (FBWA) networks. To that end, a series of literature has been published recently, in which a group of base stations forms an <it>interferer group</it> (downlink transmissions from each base station become dominant interference for the users in other in-group base stations), and the scheduling scheme deployed in the group allows only one base station to transmit at a time. As a result of time orthogonality in transmissions, the dominant cochannel interferers are prevented, and hence the packet error rate can be improved. However, prohibiting concurrent transmissions in these orthogonal schemes introduces throughput penalty as well as higher end-to-end packet delay which might not be desirable for real-time services. In this paper, we utilize <it>opportunistic nonorthogonality</it> among the in-group transmissions whenever possible and propose a novel transmission scheduling scheme for FBWA networks. The proposed scheme, in contrast to the proactive <it>interference avoidance</it> techniques, strives for the improvements in delay and throughput efficiency. To facilitate opportunistic nonorthogonal transmissions in the interferer group, estimation of <it>signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio</it> (SINR) is required at the scheduler. We have observed from simulations that the proposed scheme outperforms the reference orthogonal scheme in terms of spectral efficiency, mean packet delay, and packet dropping rate.</p
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