thesis

Mobility and resource management for 5G heterogeneous networks

Abstract

The conventional topology of current cellular networks is a star structure, where central control points usually serve as base stations (BSs). This provides the advantage of simplicity while still providing quality of service (QoS). For next-generation networks, however, this topology is disadvantageous and difficult to use due to the insufficient availability of network access. The hybrid topology radio network will thus naturally be the future mobile access network that can help to overcome current and future challenges efficiently. Therefore, relay technology can play an important role in a hybrid cellular network topology. Today, with the recent long-term evolution-advanced (LTE-A) standards, the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) supports a single-hop relay technology in which the radio access link between the BS and users is relayed by only one relay station (RS). With the help of multi-hop relay, however, the radio link between the BS and users can be extended to more than two hops to improve the coverage and network capacity. Multiple hops to transmit data to and from the corresponding BS results in the reduction of path loss. However, using a multi-hop relay system requires more radio resources to transmit data through different hops. More interference is also created due to a greater number of simultaneous transmissions in the network. New mobility and resource management schemes are thus important for achieving a high QoS while increasing the whole network capacity. In the first part, the problem of relay selection and radio resource allocation is studied, and choosing how the bandwidth should be shared between direct, backhaul, and access links in multi-hop relay networks is discussed. In such a network, resource allocation plays a critical role because it manages channel access in both time and frequency domains and determines how resources are allocated for different links. The proposed solution includes a nonlinear programming technique and a heuristic method. First, the problem formulation of resource allocation and relay selection is presented to provide an integrated framework for multi-hop relay networks. Second, an analytical solution to the problem is presented using a nonlinear programming technique. Finally, an iterative two-stage algorithm is presented to address the joint resource allocation and relay selection problem in multi-hop relay networks Under backhaul and capacity limitation constraints. In particular, the first stage proposed a fast approximation analytical solution for a resource allocation algorithm that takes into account the trade-off between the optimality and the complexity of the multi-hop relay architecture; the second stage presented a heuristic relay selection strategy that considers the RS load and helps to keep the relay from being overloaded is proposed. In the second part, the mobility problem in downlink multi-hop relay networks is addressed. In addition to the resource allocation issue, the relay selection problem is studied from a network layer perspective. Therefore, this part includes the issue of radio path selection. As an alternative to the heuristic algorithm developed in the previous part, the presented work describes the development and evaluation of a relay-selection scheme based on a Markov decision process (MDP) that considers the RS load and the existing radio-link path to improve handoff performance. First, the problem formulation of resource allocation and relay selection is presented. Second, an MDP mathematical model is developed to solve the relay selection problem in a decentralized way and to make the selection process simple. This relay selection scheme has the objective of maintaining the throughput and ensuring seamless mobility and service continuity to all mobile terminals while reducing the handoff frequency and improving handoff performance. In the third part, the admission and power control problem of a general heterogeneous network (HetNet) consisting of several small cells (SCs) is solved. Compared to the first two parts of this work, the system is expanded from a multi-hop RS to a general SC context. This part therefore focuses only on the access link problem, assuming the capacity of the SC backhaul links are large enough not to be bottlenecks. This part mainly deals with the problem of how to maximize the number of admitted users in an overloaded system while minimizing the transmit power given a certain QoS level. First, the problem is formulated to address concerns about QoS requirements in a better way. Second, a Voronoi-based user association scheme for maximizing the number of admitted users in the system under QoS and capacity limitation constraints is proposed to find near-optimal solutions. Finally, a twostage algorithm is presented to address the joint admission and power control problem in a downlink heterogeneous SC network. In particular, the first stage proposes a dynamic call admission control policy that considers the SC load and call-level QoS while also helping to keep the system from being overloaded. The second stage presents an adaptive power allocation strategy that considers both user distribution and the density of SCs in HetNets. Finally, the proposed solutions are evaluated using extensive numerical simulations, and the numerical results are presented to provide a comparison with related works found in the literature

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