27,641 research outputs found

    Performance analysis and optimal cooperative cluster size for randomly distributed small cells under cloud RAN

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    One major advantage of cloud/centralized radio access network is the ease of implementation of multi-cell coordination mechanisms to improve the system spectrum efficiency (SE). Theoretically, large number of cooperative cells lead to a higher SE; however, it may also cause significant delay due to extra channel state information feedback and joint processing computational needs at the cloud data center, which is likely to result in performance degradation. In order to investigate the delay impact on the throughput gains, we divide the network into multiple clusters of cooperative small cells and formulate a throughput optimization problem. We model various delay factors and the sum-rate of the network as a function of cluster size, treating it as the main optimization variable. For our analysis, we consider both base stations' as well as users' geometric locations as random variables for both linear and planar network deployments. The output signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio and ergodic sum-rate are derived based on the homogenous Poisson point processing model. The sum-rate optimization problem in terms of the cluster size is formulated and solved. Simulation results show that the proposed analytical framework can be utilized to accurately evaluate the performance of practical cloud-based small cell networks employing clustered cooperation

    TOWARD LAYERLESS COOPERATION AND RATE CONTROL IN WIRELESS MULTI-ACCESS CHANNELS

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    In wireless networks, a transmitted message may successfully reach multiple nodes simultaneously, which is referred to as the Wireless Multicast Advantage. As such, intermediate nodes have the ability to capture the message and then contribute to the communication toward the ultimate destination by cooperatively relaying the received message. This enables cooperative communication, which has been shown to counteract the effects of fading and attenuation in wireless networks. There has been a great deal of work addressing cooperative methods and their resulting benefits, but most of the work to date has focused on physical-layer techniques and on information-theoretic considerations. While compatible with these, the main thrust of this dissertation is to explore a new approach by implementing cooperation at the network layer. First, we illustrate the idea in a multi-hop multi-access wireless network, in which a set of source users generate packets to deliver to a common destination. An opportunistic and dynamic cooperation protocol is proposed at the network level, where users with a better channel to the destination have the capability and option to relay packets from users that are farther afield. The proposed mode of cooperation protocol is new and relies on MAC/Network-level of relaying, but also takes into account physical-layer parameters that determine successful reception at the destination and/or the relay. We explicitly characterize the stable throughput and average delay performance. Our analysis reveals that cooperation at the network layer leads to substantial performance gains for both performance metrics. Next, on top of the network-layer cooperation, we investigate enhanced cooperative techniques that exploit more sophisticated physical-layer properties. Specifically, we consider dynamic decode-and-forward, superposition coding, and multipacket reception capability, and we quantify the extent to which the enhancement techniques can further improve the stable throughput region. Then we revert back to the two-user multi-access channel with single-packet reception, which has been extensively studied in the case of no cooperation. After cooperation is permitted between the two users, we revisit the relationship between the stability region and the throughput region under both scheduled access and random access schemes. Finally, we shift our focus from the packet-level to bit-level multi-access channels. By exploiting the bit-nature of a packet, we create a bridge between traditional physical-layer-based transmission rates and classical MAC/Network-layer-based throughput rates. We first obtain the closed form of the stability region in bits/slot. Then, as a separate, but related issue, we look at the minimum delivery time policy; for any initial queue size vector, the optimal policy that empties all bits in the system within the shortest time is characterized

    Opportunistic Relaying in Wireless Networks

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    Relay networks having nn source-to-destination pairs and mm half-duplex relays, all operating in the same frequency band in the presence of block fading, are analyzed. This setup has attracted significant attention and several relaying protocols have been reported in the literature. However, most of the proposed solutions require either centrally coordinated scheduling or detailed channel state information (CSI) at the transmitter side. Here, an opportunistic relaying scheme is proposed, which alleviates these limitations. The scheme entails a two-hop communication protocol, in which sources communicate with destinations only through half-duplex relays. The key idea is to schedule at each hop only a subset of nodes that can benefit from \emph{multiuser diversity}. To select the source and destination nodes for each hop, it requires only CSI at receivers (relays for the first hop, and destination nodes for the second hop) and an integer-value CSI feedback to the transmitters. For the case when nn is large and mm is fixed, it is shown that the proposed scheme achieves a system throughput of m/2m/2 bits/s/Hz. In contrast, the information-theoretic upper bound of (m/2)loglogn(m/2)\log \log n bits/s/Hz is achievable only with more demanding CSI assumptions and cooperation between the relays. Furthermore, it is shown that, under the condition that the product of block duration and system bandwidth scales faster than logn\log n, the achievable throughput of the proposed scheme scales as Θ(logn)\Theta ({\log n}). Notably, this is proven to be the optimal throughput scaling even if centralized scheduling is allowed, thus proving the optimality of the proposed scheme in the scaling law sense.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, To appear in IEEE Transactions on Information Theor

    Throughput analysis of ALOHA with cooperative diversity

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    Cooperative transmissions emulate multi-antenna systems and can improve the quality of signal reception. In this paper, we propose and analyze a cross layer random access scheme, C-ALOHA, that enables cooperative transmissions in the context of ALOHA system. Our analysis shows that over a fading channel C-ALOHA can improve the throughput by 30%, as compared to standard ALOHA protocol

    Wireless Network-Level Partial Relay Cooperation: A Stable Throughput Analysis

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    In this work, we study the benefit of partial relay cooperation. We consider a two-node system consisting of one source and one relay node transmitting information to a common destination. The source and the relay have external traffic and in addition, the relay is equipped with a flow controller to regulate the incoming traffic from the source node. The cooperation is performed at the network level. A collision channel with erasures is considered. We provide an exact characterization of the stability region of the system and we also prove that the system with partial cooperation is always better or at least equal to the system without the flow controller.Comment: Submitted for journal publication. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1502.0113
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