11,662 research outputs found
Ultra Dense Small Cell Networks: Turning Density into Energy Efficiency
In this paper, a novel approach for joint power control and user scheduling
is proposed for optimizing energy efficiency (EE), in terms of bits per unit
energy, in ultra dense small cell networks (UDNs). Due to severe coupling in
interference, this problem is formulated as a dynamic stochastic game (DSG)
between small cell base stations (SBSs). This game enables to capture the
dynamics of both the queues and channel states of the system. To solve this
game, assuming a large homogeneous UDN deployment, the problem is cast as a
mean-field game (MFG) in which the MFG equilibrium is analyzed with the aid of
low-complexity tractable partial differential equations. Exploiting the
stochastic nature of the problem, user scheduling is formulated as a stochastic
optimization problem and solved using the drift plus penalty (DPP) approach in
the framework of Lyapunov optimization. Remarkably, it is shown that by weaving
notions from Lyapunov optimization and mean-field theory, the proposed solution
yields an equilibrium control policy per SBS which maximizes the network
utility while ensuring users' quality-of-service. Simulation results show that
the proposed approach achieves up to 70.7% gains in EE and 99.5% reductions in
the network's outage probabilities compared to a baseline model which focuses
on improving EE while attempting to satisfy the users' instantaneous
quality-of-service requirements.Comment: 15 pages, 21 figures (sub-figures are counted separately), IEEE
Journal on Selected Areas in Communications - Series on Green Communications
and Networking (Issue 2
- …