302 research outputs found

    Design and Analysis of Opportunistic MAC Protocols for Cognitive Radio Wireless Networks

    Get PDF
    As more and more wireless applications/services emerge in the market, the already heavily crowded radio spectrum becomes much scarcer. Meanwhile, however,as it is reported in the recent literature, there is a large amount of radio spectrum that is under-utilized. This motivates the concept of cognitive radio wireless networks that allow the unlicensed secondary-users (SUs) to dynamically use the vacant radio spectrum which is not being used by the licensed primary-users (PUs). In this dissertation, we investigate protocol design for both the synchronous and asynchronous cognitive radio networks with emphasis on the medium access control (MAC) layer. We propose various spectrum sharing schemes, opportunistic packet scheduling schemes, and spectrum sensing schemes in the MAC and physical (PHY) layers for different types of cognitive radio networks, allowing the SUs to opportunistically utilize the licensed spectrum while confining the level of interference to the range the PUs can tolerate. First, we propose the cross-layer based multi-channel MAC protocol, which integrates the cooperative spectrum sensing at PHY layer and the interweave-based spectrum access at MAC layer, for the synchronous cognitive radio networks. Second, we propose the channel-hopping based single-transceiver MAC protocol for the hardware-constrained synchronous cognitive radio networks, under which the SUs can identify and exploit the vacant channels by dynamically switching across the licensed channels with their distinct channel-hopping sequences. Third, we propose the opportunistic multi-channel MAC protocol with the two-threshold sequential spectrum sensing algorithm for asynchronous cognitive radio networks. Fourth, by combining the interweave and underlay spectrum sharing modes, we propose the adaptive spectrum sharing scheme for code division multiple access (CDMA) based cognitive MAC in the uplink communications over the asynchronous cognitive radio networks, where the PUs may have different types of channel usage patterns. Finally, we develop a packet scheduling scheme for the PU MAC protocol in the context of time division multiple access (TDMA)-based cognitive radio wireless networks, which is designed to operate friendly towards the SUs in terms of the vacant-channel probability. We also develop various analytical models, including the Markov chain models, M=GY =1 queuing models, cross-layer optimization models, etc., to rigorously analyze the performance of our proposed MAC protocols in terms of aggregate throughput, access delay, and packet drop rate for both the saturation network case and non-saturation network case. In addition, we conducted extensive simulations to validate our analytical models and evaluate our proposed MAC protocols/schemes. Both the numerical and simulation results show that our proposed MAC protocols/schemes can significantly improve the spectrum utilization efficiency of wireless networks

    Cooperative retransmission protocols in fading channels : issues, solutions and applications

    Get PDF
    Future wireless systems are expected to extensively rely on cooperation between terminals, mimicking MIMO scenarios when terminal dimensions limit implementation of multiple antenna technology. On this line, cooperative retransmission protocols are considered as particularly promising technology due to their opportunistic and flexible exploitation of both spatial and time diversity. In this dissertation, some of the major issues that hinder the practical implementation of this technology are identified and pertaining solutions are proposed and analyzed. Potentials of cooperative and cooperative retransmission protocols for a practical implementation of dynamic spectrum access paradigm are also recognized and investigated. Detailed contributions follow. While conventionally regarded as energy efficient communications paradigms, both cooperative and retransmission concepts increase circuitry energy and may lead to energy overconsumption as in, e.g., sensor networks. In this context, advantages of cooperative retransmission protocols are reexamined in this dissertation and their limitation for short transmission ranges observed. An optimization effort is provided for extending an energy- efficient applicability of these protocols. Underlying assumption of altruistic relaying has always been a major stumbling block for implementation of cooperative technologies. In this dissertation, provision is made to alleviate this assumption and opportunistic mechanisms are designed that incentivize relaying via a spectrum leasing approach. Mechanisms are provided for both cooperative and cooperative retransmission protocols, obtaining a meaningful upsurge of spectral efficiency for all involved nodes (source-destination link and the relays). It is further recognized in this dissertation that the proposed relaying-incentivizing schemes have an additional and certainly not less important application, that is in dynamic spectrum access for property-rights cognitive-radio implementation. Provided solutions avoid commons-model cognitive-radio strict sensing requirements and regulatory and taxonomy issues of a property-rights model

    ActMesh- A Cognitive Resource Management paradigm for dynamic mobile Internet Access with Reliability Guarantees

    Get PDF
    Wireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) are going increasing attention as a flexible low-cost networking architecture to provide media Internet access over metropolitan areas to mobile clients requiring multimedia services. In WMNs, Mesh Routers (MRs) from the mesh backbone and accomplish the twofold task of traffic forwarding, as well as providing multimedia access to mobile Mesh Clients (MCs). Due to the intensive bandwidth-resource requested for supporting QoS-demanding multimedia services, performance of the current WMNs is mainly limited by spectrum-crowding and traffic-congestion, as only scarce spectrum-resources is currently licensed for the MCs' access. In principle, this problem could be mitigated by exploiting in a media-friendly (e.g., content-aware) way the context-aware capabilities offered by the Cognitive Radio (CR) paradigm. As integrated exploitation of both content and context-aware system's capabilities is at the basis of our proposed Active Mesh (ActMesh) networking paradigm. This last aims at defining a network-wide architecture for realizing media-friendly Cognitive Mesh nets (e.g., context aware Cognitive Mesh nets). Hence, main contribution of this work is four fold: 1. After introducing main functional blocks of our ActMesh architecture, suitable self-adaptive Belief Propagation and Soft Data Fusion algorithms are designed to provide context-awareness. This is done under both cooperative and noncooperative sensing frameworks. 2. The resulting network-wide resource management problem is modelled as a constrained stochastic Network Utility Maximization (NUM) problem, with the dual (contrasting) objective to maximize spectrum efficiency at the network level, while accounting for the perceived quality of the delivered media flows at the client level. 3. A fully distributed, scalable and self-adaptive implementation of the resulting Active Resource Manager (ARM) is deployed, that explicitly accounts for the energy limits of the battery powered MCs and the effects induced by both fading and client mobility. Due to informationally decentralized architecture of the ActMesh net, the complexity of (possibly, optimal) centralized solutions for resource management becomes prohibitive when number of MCs accessing ActMesh net grow. Furthermore, centralized resource management solutions could required large amounts of time to collect and process the required network information, which, in turn, induce delay that can be unacceptable for delay sensitive media applications, e.g., multimedia streaming. Hence, it is important to develop network-wide ARM policies that are both distributed and scalable by exploiting the radio MCs capabilities to sense, adapt and coordinate themselves. We validate our analytical models via simulation based numerical tests, that support actual effectiveness of the overall ActMesh paradigm, both in terms of objective and subjective performance metrics. In particular, the basic tradeoff among backbone traffic-vs-access traffic arising in the ActMesh net from the bandwidth-efficient opportunistic resource allocation policy pursued by the deployed ARM is numerically characterized. The standardization framework we inspire to is the emerging IEEE 802.16h one

    ActMesh- A Cognitive Resource Management paradigm for dynamic mobile Internet Access with Reliability Guarantees

    Get PDF
    Wireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) are going increasing attention as a flexible low-cost networking architecture to provide media Internet access over metropolitan areas to mobile clients requiring multimedia services. In WMNs, Mesh Routers (MRs) from the mesh backbone and accomplish the twofold task of traffic forwarding, as well as providing multimedia access to mobile Mesh Clients (MCs). Due to the intensive bandwidth-resource requested for supporting QoS-demanding multimedia services, performance of the current WMNs is mainly limited by spectrum-crowding and traffic-congestion, as only scarce spectrum-resources is currently licensed for the MCs' access. In principle, this problem could be mitigated by exploiting in a media-friendly (e.g., content-aware) way the context-aware capabilities offered by the Cognitive Radio (CR) paradigm. As integrated exploitation of both content and context-aware system's capabilities is at the basis of our proposed Active Mesh (ActMesh) networking paradigm. This last aims at defining a network-wide architecture for realizing media-friendly Cognitive Mesh nets (e.g., context aware Cognitive Mesh nets). Hence, main contribution of this work is four fold: 1. After introducing main functional blocks of our ActMesh architecture, suitable self-adaptive Belief Propagation and Soft Data Fusion algorithms are designed to provide context-awareness. This is done under both cooperative and noncooperative sensing frameworks. 2. The resulting network-wide resource management problem is modelled as a constrained stochastic Network Utility Maximization (NUM) problem, with the dual (contrasting) objective to maximize spectrum efficiency at the network level, while accounting for the perceived quality of the delivered media flows at the client level. 3. A fully distributed, scalable and self-adaptive implementation of the resulting Active Resource Manager (ARM) is deployed, that explicitly accounts for the energy limits of the battery powered MCs and the effects induced by both fading and client mobility. Due to informationally decentralized architecture of the ActMesh net, the complexity of (possibly, optimal) centralized solutions for resource management becomes prohibitive when number of MCs accessing ActMesh net grow. Furthermore, centralized resource management solutions could required large amounts of time to collect and process the required network information, which, in turn, induce delay that can be unacceptable for delay sensitive media applications, e.g., multimedia streaming. Hence, it is important to develop network-wide ARM policies that are both distributed and scalable by exploiting the radio MCs capabilities to sense, adapt and coordinate themselves. We validate our analytical models via simulation based numerical tests, that support actual effectiveness of the overall ActMesh paradigm, both in terms of objective and subjective performance metrics. In particular, the basic tradeoff among backbone traffic-vs-access traffic arising in the ActMesh net from the bandwidth-efficient opportunistic resource allocation policy pursued by the deployed ARM is numerically characterized. The standardization framework we inspire to is the emerging IEEE 802.16h one

    Fourth ERCIM workshop on e-mobility

    Get PDF
    • …
    corecore