4 research outputs found
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System optimisation and radio planning for future LTE-advanced
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University LondonThis work is related to wireless communication. In this Thesis three main issues are addressed for future cellular networks: power consumption, interference and mobility. These issues continue to be a burden on the system’s performance as long as technology keeps evolving. In the presented chapters, the focus was to introduce greater intelligence to the LTE system algorithms and bring to them a dynamic and self-organizing approach. The first approach concerns power consumption in wireless terminals. The currently applied solution to save energy is the DRX mechanism. It organizes the time when the terminal wakes up and starts receiving data, and when it goes into sleep mode in order to save its battery power. The current DRX is described as static or fixed which makes its parameters unsuitable for the nature of the bursty traffic. In this work an adaptive DRX mechanism is proposed and evaluated as the wireless terminal battery saving algorithm. The second approach is co-channel interference mitigation. To increase the system’s capacity and avoid spectrum scarcity, small cells such as Femtocells are deployed and operate on the same frequency bands as the Macrocell. Although these small nodes increase the system capacity, however, the challenges will be in the femtocells planning and management in addition to the interference issues. Here a dynamic interference cancellation approach is presented to enable the Femtocell to track the allocated resources to the Macro-users, and to avoid using them. The third approach concerns mobility management in heterogeneous networks. The wireless terminal may have different mobility levels during handover which increases the handover failures due to failure in handover commands and aging of the reported parameters. This issue is presented in detail with the aim to avoid performance degradation and improve the reporting mechanisms during fast mobility levels. For this regard the presented method proposes more cooperation between the serving cell and the end-user so that the large amount of overhead and measurement are reduced. Simulations with different configurations are conducted to present the results of the proposed models. Results show that the proposed models bring improvements to the LTE system. The enhanced self-organized architecture in the three presented approaches performs well in terms of power saving, dynamic spectrum utilization by Femtocells, and mitigation of sudden throughput degradation due to the serving cell’s downlink signal outage during mobility.Brunel University Londo
Enhancing the energy efficiency of radio base stations
This thesis is concerned with the energy efficiency of cellular networks. It
studies the dominant power consumer in future cellular networks, the Long Term
Evolution (LTE) radio Base Station (BS), and proposes mechanisms that enhance
the BS energy efficiency by reducing its power consumption under target rate
constraints. These mechanisms trade spare capacity for power saving.
First, the thesis describes how much power individual components of a BS
consume and what parameters affect this consumption based on third party
experimental data. These individual models are joined into a component power
model for an entire BS. The component model is an essential step in analysis but is
too complex for many applications. It is therefore abstracted into a much simpler
parameterized model to reduce its complexity. The parameterized model is further
simplified into an affine model which can be applied in power minimization.
Second, Power Control (PC) and Discontinuous Transmission (DTX) are identified as promising power-saving Radio Resource Management (RRM) mechanisms
and applied to multi-user downlink transmission. PC reduces the power consumption
of the Power Amplifier (PA) and is found to be most effective at high
traffic loads. DTX mostly reduces the power consumption of the Baseband (BB)
unit while interrupting transmission and is better applied in low traffic loads.
Joint optimization of these two techniques is found to enable additional power-saving
at medium traffic loads and to be a convex problem which can be solved
efficiently. The convex problem is extended to provide a comprehensive power-saving
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) frame resource
scheduler. The proposed scheduler is shown to reduce power consumption by
25-40% in computer simulations, depending on the traffic load.
Finally, the thesis investigates the influence of interference on power consumption
in a network of multiple power-saving BSs. It discusses three popular alternative
distributed uncoordinated methods which align DTX mode between neighbouring
BSs. To address drawbacks of these three, a fourth memory-based DTX alignment
method is proposed. It decreases power consumption by up to 40% and
retransmission probability by around 20%, depending on the traffic load
Potentzia domeinuko NOMA 5G sareetarako eta haratago
Tesis inglés 268 p. -- Tesis euskera 274 p.During the last decade, the amount of data carried over wireless networks has grown exponentially. Several reasons have led to this situation, but the most influential ones are the massive deployment of devices connected to the network and the constant evolution in the services offered. In this context, 5G targets the correct implementation of every application integrated into the use cases. Nevertheless, the biggest challenge to make ITU-R defined cases (eMBB, URLLC and mMTC) a reality is the improvement in spectral efficiency. Therefore, in this thesis, a combination of two mechanisms is proposed to improve spectral efficiency: Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (NOMA) techniques and Radio Resource Management (RRM) schemes. Specifically, NOMA transmits simultaneously several layered data flows so that the whole bandwidth is used throughout the entire time to deliver more than one service simultaneously. Then, RRM schemes provide efficient management and distribution of radio resources among network users. Although NOMA techniques and RRM schemes can be very advantageous in all use cases, this thesis focuses on making contributions in eMBB and URLLC environments and proposing solutions to communications that are expected to be relevant in 6G