275 research outputs found
Handover Management in Highly Dense Femtocellular Networks
For dense femtocells, intelligent integrated femtocell/macrocell network
architecture, a neighbor cell list with a minimum number of femtocells,
effective call admission control (CAC), and handover processes with proper
signaling are the open research issues. An appropriate traffic model for the
integrated femtocell/macrocell network is also not yet developed. In this
paper, we present the major issue of mobility management for the integrated
femtocell/macrocell network. We propose a novel algorithm to create a neighbor
cell list with a minimum, but appropriate, number of cells for handover. We
also propose detailed handover procedures and a novel traffic model for the
integrated femtocell/macrocell network. The proposed CAC effectively handles
various calls. The numerical and simulation results show the importance of the
integrated femtocell/macrocell network and the performance improvement of the
proposed schemes. Our proposed schemes for dense femtocells will be very
effective for those in research and industry to implement
Open vs Closed Access Femtocells in the Uplink
Femtocells are assuming an increasingly important role in the coverage and
capacity of cellular networks. In contrast to existing cellular systems,
femtocells are end-user deployed and controlled, randomly located, and rely on
third party backhaul (e.g. DSL or cable modem). Femtocells can be configured to
be either open access or closed access. Open access allows an arbitrary nearby
cellular user to use the femtocell, whereas closed access restricts the use of
the femtocell to users explicitly approved by the owner. Seemingly, the network
operator would prefer an open access deployment since this provides an
inexpensive way to expand their network capabilities, whereas the femtocell
owner would prefer closed access, in order to keep the femtocell's capacity and
backhaul to himself. We show mathematically and through simulations that the
reality is more complicated for both parties, and that the best approach
depends heavily on whether the multiple access scheme is orthogonal (TDMA or
OFDMA, per subband) or non-orthogonal (CDMA). In a TDMA/OFDMA network,
closed-access is typically preferable at high user densities, whereas in CDMA,
open access can provide gains of more than 200% for the home user by reducing
the near-far problem experienced by the femtocell. The results of this paper
suggest that the interests of the femtocell owner and the network operator are
more compatible than typically believed, and that CDMA femtocells should be
configured for open access whereas OFDMA or TDMA femtocells should adapt to the
cellular user density.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, submitted to IEEE Trans. on Wireless
Communication
Enhanced Inter-Cell Interference Coordination Challenges in Heterogeneous Networks
3GPP LTE-Advanced has started a new study item to investigate Heterogeneous
Network (HetNet) deployments as a cost effective way to deal with the
unrelenting traffic demand. HetNets consist of a mix of macrocells, remote
radio heads, and low-power nodes such as picocells, femtocells, and relays.
Leveraging network topology, increasing the proximity between the access
network and the end-users, has the potential to provide the next significant
performance leap in wireless networks, improving spatial spectrum reuse and
enhancing indoor coverage. Nevertheless, deployment of a large number of small
cells overlaying the macrocells is not without new technical challenges. In
this article, we present the concept of heterogeneous networks and also
describe the major technical challenges associated with such network
architecture. We focus in particular on the standardization activities within
the 3GPP related to enhanced inter-cell interference coordination.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Interference Management in Heterogeneous Networks with Blind Transmitters
Future multi-tier communication networks will require enhanced network
capacity and reduced overhead. In the absence of Channel State Information
(CSI) at the transmitters, Blind Interference Alignment (BIA) and Topological
Interference Management (TIM) can achieve optimal Degrees of Freedom (DoF),
minimising network's overhead. In addition, Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access
(NOMA) can increase the sum rate of the network, compared to orthogonal radio
access techniques currently adopted by 4G networks. Our contribution is two
interference management schemes, BIA and a hybrid TIM-NOMA scheme, employed in
heterogeneous networks by applying user-pairing and Kronecker Product
representation. BIA manages inter- and intra-cell interference by antenna
selection and appropriate message scheduling. The hybrid scheme manages
intra-cell interference based on NOMA and inter-cell interference based on TIM.
We show that both schemes achieve at least double the rate of TDMA. The hybrid
scheme always outperforms TDMA and BIA in terms of Degrees of Freedom (DoF).
Comparing the two proposed schemes, BIA achieves more DoF than TDMA under
certain restrictions, and provides better Bit-Error-Rate (BER) and sum rate
performance to macrocell users, whereas the hybrid scheme improves the
performance of femtocell users.Comment: 30 pages, 18 figure
Energy Efficient Mobility Management for the Macrocell – Femtocell LTE Network
Femtocells will play a key role in future deployments of the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) the Long Term Evolution (LTE) system, as they are expected to enhance system capacity, and greatly improve the energy-efficiency in a cost-effective manner. Due to the short transmit-receive distance, femtocells prolong handset battery life and enhance the Quality of Service (QoS) perceived by the end users. However, large-scale femtocell deployment comprises many technical challenges, mainly including security, interference and mobility management. Under the viewpoint of energy-efficient mobility management, this chapter discusses the key features of the femtocell technology and presents a novel energy-efficient handover decision policy for the macrocell – femtocell LTE network. The proposed HO decision policy aims at reducing the transmit power of the LTE mobile terminals in a backwards compatible with the standard LTE handover decision procedure. Simulation results show that significantly lower energy and power consumption can be attained if the proposed approach is employed, at the cost of a moderately increased number of handover executions events
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