567 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
On Enabling Concurrent Communications in Wireless Networks
Today innumerable devices use the wireless spectrum for communication, including cell-phones, WiFi devices, military radios, public safety radios, satellite phones etc. This crowding is limiting the experience of each device either through interference or by waiting fortheir turn to communicate. So, how do we allow a limited spectral resource to reliably scale to many more devices? This is possible through concurrent communication where multiple links share the spectrum and communicate simultaneously using multi-antenna techniques. One promising technique is Interference Alignment (IA), that has been shown to be Degrees-of-Freedom optimal under some conditions. Still, IA requires accurate channel knowledge to be effective and its ability to achieve high throughput under time varying wireless conditions is yet unproven. We make progress towards understanding these limitations and provide viable solutions.We study an IA system under different models of the time varying channel and derive expressions for the achieved rate over time and the system throughput. Using these, we can arrive at the optimal duration of the data phase that maximizes throughput. We proposetwo strategies that help to counter the effects of a time varying channel. First, data aided receiver beam-tracking along with link adaptation provides a sizable improvement in the received signal to interference and noise ratio. Second, updating the transmit beams during data transmission using short feedback pilots improves alignment at the receivers. In faster varying channels, we get a more stable achieved rate whereas in slower varying channels, we see additional throughput gains. The conclusion from this work is that an IA system must be trained more frequently than the channel coherence time to ensure high throughput and beam adaptation during the data phase gives significant robustness to the system.Lastly, we present an IA based medium access control (MAC) protocol that outperforms traditional protocols. Our concurrent carrier sense multiple access (CSMA) protocol based on beam-nulling is compatible with CSMA and increases the sum throughput by 2 to 3x.We also show that IA outperforms optimal time division multiple access under time varying conditions. Hence a well-designed IA system can enable reliable concurrent communications in a wireless network
Advanced PHY/MAC Design for Infrastructure-less Wireless Networks
Wireless networks play a key role in providing information exchange among distributed mobile devices. Nowadays, Infrastructure-Less Wireless Networks (ILWNs), which include ad hoc and sensor networks, are gaining increasing popularity as they do not need a fixed infrastructure. Simultaneously, multiple research initiatives have led to different findings at the physical (PHY) layer of the wireless communication systems, which can effectively be adopted in ILWNs. However, the distributed nature of ILWNs demand for different network control policies that should have into account the most recent findings to increase the network performance.
This thesis investigates the adoption of Multi-Packet Reception (MPR) techniques at the PHY layer of distributed wireless networks, which is itself a challenging task due to the lack of a central coordinator and the spatial distribution of the nodes. The work starts with the derivation of an MPR system performance model that allows to determine optimal points of operation for different radio conditions. The model developed and validated in this thesis is then used to study the performance of ILWNs in high density of transmitters and when the spectrum can be sensed a priori (i.e. before each transmission). Based on the theoretical analysis developed in the thesis, we show that depending on the propagation conditions the spectrum sensing can reduce the network
throughput to a level where its use should be avoided. At the final stage, we propose a crosslayered architecture that improves the capacity of an ILWN. Different Medium Access Control (MAC) schemes for ILWNs adopting MPR communications are proposed and their performance is theoretically characterized. We propose a cross-layer optimization methodology that considers the features of the MPR communication scheme together with the MAC performance. The proposed cross-layer optimization methodology improves the throughput of ILWNs, which is validated through theoretical analysis and multiple simulation results
- …