Planning Solar in Energy-Managed Cellular Networks

Recently, there has been a lot of interest on the energy efficiency and environmental impact of wireless networks. Given that the base stations are the network elements that use most of this energy, much research has dealt with ways to reduce the energy used by the base stations by turning them off...

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Main Authors: Mathieu D'Amours, Andre Girard, Brunilde Sanso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2018-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8502042/
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spelling doaj-59fe9a08cb1248c59705504fdfed5dca2021-03-29T21:26:03ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362018-01-016652126522610.1109/ACCESS.2018.28770408502042Planning Solar in Energy-Managed Cellular NetworksMathieu D'Amours0Andre Girard1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4540-9793Brunilde Sanso2Department of Electrical Engineering, École Polytechnique of Montréal, Montreal, QC, CanadaINRS-EMT, Montreal, QC, CanadaDepartment of Electrical Engineering, École Polytechnique of Montréal, Montreal, QC, CanadaRecently, there has been a lot of interest on the energy efficiency and environmental impact of wireless networks. Given that the base stations are the network elements that use most of this energy, much research has dealt with ways to reduce the energy used by the base stations by turning them off during periods of low load. In addition to this, installing a solar harvesting system made up of solar panels, batteries, charge controllers, and inverters is another way to further reduce the network environmental impact, and some research has been dealing with this for individual base stations. In this paper, we show that both techniques are tightly coupled. We propose a mathematical model that captures the synergy between solar installation over a network and the dynamic operation of energy-managed base stations. We study the interactions between the two methods for networks of hundreds of base stations and show that the order in which each method is introduced into the system does make a difference in terms of cost and performance. We also show that installing solar is not always the best solution even when the unit cost of the solar energy is smaller than the grid cost. We conclude that planning the solar installation and energy management of the base stations has to be done jointly.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8502042/Cellular networksenergy managementsleep modesolar power
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mathieu D'Amours
Andre Girard
Brunilde Sanso
spellingShingle Mathieu D'Amours
Andre Girard
Brunilde Sanso
Planning Solar in Energy-Managed Cellular Networks
IEEE Access
Cellular networks
energy management
sleep mode
solar power
author_facet Mathieu D'Amours
Andre Girard
Brunilde Sanso
author_sort Mathieu D'Amours
title Planning Solar in Energy-Managed Cellular Networks
title_short Planning Solar in Energy-Managed Cellular Networks
title_full Planning Solar in Energy-Managed Cellular Networks
title_fullStr Planning Solar in Energy-Managed Cellular Networks
title_full_unstemmed Planning Solar in Energy-Managed Cellular Networks
title_sort planning solar in energy-managed cellular networks
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Recently, there has been a lot of interest on the energy efficiency and environmental impact of wireless networks. Given that the base stations are the network elements that use most of this energy, much research has dealt with ways to reduce the energy used by the base stations by turning them off during periods of low load. In addition to this, installing a solar harvesting system made up of solar panels, batteries, charge controllers, and inverters is another way to further reduce the network environmental impact, and some research has been dealing with this for individual base stations. In this paper, we show that both techniques are tightly coupled. We propose a mathematical model that captures the synergy between solar installation over a network and the dynamic operation of energy-managed base stations. We study the interactions between the two methods for networks of hundreds of base stations and show that the order in which each method is introduced into the system does make a difference in terms of cost and performance. We also show that installing solar is not always the best solution even when the unit cost of the solar energy is smaller than the grid cost. We conclude that planning the solar installation and energy management of the base stations has to be done jointly.
topic Cellular networks
energy management
sleep mode
solar power
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8502042/
work_keys_str_mv AT mathieudamours planningsolarinenergymanagedcellularnetworks
AT andregirard planningsolarinenergymanagedcellularnetworks
AT brunildesanso planningsolarinenergymanagedcellularnetworks
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