6,495 research outputs found
Opportunistic Relaying in Wireless Networks
Relay networks having source-to-destination pairs and 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 is large and is fixed, it is shown that
the proposed scheme achieves a system throughput of bits/s/Hz. In
contrast, the information-theoretic upper bound of 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 , the
achievable throughput of the proposed scheme scales as .
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
MAC Centered Cooperation - Synergistic Design of Network Coding, Multi-Packet Reception, and Improved Fairness to Increase Network Throughput
We design a cross-layer approach to aid in develop- ing a cooperative
solution using multi-packet reception (MPR), network coding (NC), and medium
access (MAC). We construct a model for the behavior of the IEEE 802.11 MAC
protocol and apply it to key small canonical topology components and their
larger counterparts. The results obtained from this model match the available
experimental results with fidelity. Using this model, we show that fairness
allocation by the IEEE 802.11 MAC can significantly impede performance; hence,
we devise a new MAC that not only substantially improves throughput, but
provides fairness to flows of information rather than to nodes. We show that
cooperation between NC, MPR, and our new MAC achieves super-additive gains of
up to 6.3 times that of routing with the standard IEEE 802.11 MAC. Furthermore,
we extend the model to analyze our MAC's asymptotic and throughput behaviors as
the number of nodes increases or the MPR capability is limited to only a single
node. Finally, we show that although network performance is reduced under
substantial asymmetry or limited implementation of MPR to a central node, there
are some important practical cases, even under these conditions, where MPR, NC,
and their combination provide significant gains
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