Mobile Access and Network-Coding in Diverse-Band Wireless Networks: Design and Evaluation

Wireless networks increasingly utilize diverse spectral bands, which exhibit vast differences in transmission range, bandwidth and available airtime. While tremendous efforts have been devoted to enable efficient mobile access of single-band networks and increase their throughput, e.g., via network...

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Main Author: Giannoulis, Anastasios
Other Authors: Knightly, Edward W.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1911/71286
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spelling ndltd-RICE-oai-scholarship.rice.edu-1911-712862013-06-07T03:29:59ZMobile Access and Network-Coding in Diverse-Band Wireless Networks: Design and EvaluationGiannoulis, AnastasiosDiverse-band networksMobile AccessNetwork CodingMulti-band networksInferenceWireless networks increasingly utilize diverse spectral bands, which exhibit vast differences in transmission range, bandwidth and available airtime. While tremendous efforts have been devoted to enable efficient mobile access of single-band networks and increase their throughput, e.g., via network coding, such single-band solutions are unfortunately oblivious to the diversity and abundance of the available spectral bands. In this thesis, I present and evaluate novel schemes for mobile access and for throughput increase using network coding, schemes that are designed for diverse-band wireless networks, i.e., networks operating in multiple diverse bands. Specifically, I introduce the first scheme designed for mobile clients to evaluate and select both APs and spectral bands in diverse-band networks. The fundamental problem is that the potentially vast number of spectrum and AP options may render scanning prohibitive. Thus, my key technique is for clients to infer the critical metrics of channel quality and available airtime for their current location and bands using limited measurements collected in other bands and at other locations. I evaluate my scheme via experiments and emulations, which are enabled by a four-band testbed that I deploy. A key finding is that under a diverse set of operating conditions, mobile clients can accurately predict their performance without a direct measurement at their current location and spectral bands. Moreover, I introduce the first band selection schemes designed for diverse-band networks exploiting overheard packets to enable network coding. The main problem is that band selections in such networks are challenged by conflicting factors affecting throughput: while the number of overhearing nodes generally increases with decreasing frequency, channel width and spatial reuse unfortunately decrease. Thus, the key technique of the proposed schemes is to jointly incorporate coding gains, channel width and spatial reuse in band selections. I evaluate these schemes via simulations employing a physical-layer model driven by measurements collected using the deployed four-band testbed. An important finding is that the proposed schemes can outperform coding-oblivious spectrum access in terms of throughput, as their band selection enables more coding opportunities. My work has two key implications. First, it can significantly improve throughput performance in networks enabled by today’s unlicensed spectrum and by the billion-dollar industry of white-space networking. Second, I anticipate that this thesis will highly impact future research, as I open new research areas in a domain that has attracted such tremendous commercial and research interest.Knightly, Edward W.2013-06-05T14:59:44Z2013-06-05T14:59:46Z2013-06-05T14:59:44Z2013-06-05T14:59:46Z2012-122013-06-05December 20122013-06-05T14:59:47Zthesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1911/71286123456789/ETD-2012-12-282eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Diverse-band networks
Mobile Access
Network Coding
Multi-band networks
Inference
spellingShingle Diverse-band networks
Mobile Access
Network Coding
Multi-band networks
Inference
Giannoulis, Anastasios
Mobile Access and Network-Coding in Diverse-Band Wireless Networks: Design and Evaluation
description Wireless networks increasingly utilize diverse spectral bands, which exhibit vast differences in transmission range, bandwidth and available airtime. While tremendous efforts have been devoted to enable efficient mobile access of single-band networks and increase their throughput, e.g., via network coding, such single-band solutions are unfortunately oblivious to the diversity and abundance of the available spectral bands. In this thesis, I present and evaluate novel schemes for mobile access and for throughput increase using network coding, schemes that are designed for diverse-band wireless networks, i.e., networks operating in multiple diverse bands. Specifically, I introduce the first scheme designed for mobile clients to evaluate and select both APs and spectral bands in diverse-band networks. The fundamental problem is that the potentially vast number of spectrum and AP options may render scanning prohibitive. Thus, my key technique is for clients to infer the critical metrics of channel quality and available airtime for their current location and bands using limited measurements collected in other bands and at other locations. I evaluate my scheme via experiments and emulations, which are enabled by a four-band testbed that I deploy. A key finding is that under a diverse set of operating conditions, mobile clients can accurately predict their performance without a direct measurement at their current location and spectral bands. Moreover, I introduce the first band selection schemes designed for diverse-band networks exploiting overheard packets to enable network coding. The main problem is that band selections in such networks are challenged by conflicting factors affecting throughput: while the number of overhearing nodes generally increases with decreasing frequency, channel width and spatial reuse unfortunately decrease. Thus, the key technique of the proposed schemes is to jointly incorporate coding gains, channel width and spatial reuse in band selections. I evaluate these schemes via simulations employing a physical-layer model driven by measurements collected using the deployed four-band testbed. An important finding is that the proposed schemes can outperform coding-oblivious spectrum access in terms of throughput, as their band selection enables more coding opportunities. My work has two key implications. First, it can significantly improve throughput performance in networks enabled by today’s unlicensed spectrum and by the billion-dollar industry of white-space networking. Second, I anticipate that this thesis will highly impact future research, as I open new research areas in a domain that has attracted such tremendous commercial and research interest.
author2 Knightly, Edward W.
author_facet Knightly, Edward W.
Giannoulis, Anastasios
author Giannoulis, Anastasios
author_sort Giannoulis, Anastasios
title Mobile Access and Network-Coding in Diverse-Band Wireless Networks: Design and Evaluation
title_short Mobile Access and Network-Coding in Diverse-Band Wireless Networks: Design and Evaluation
title_full Mobile Access and Network-Coding in Diverse-Band Wireless Networks: Design and Evaluation
title_fullStr Mobile Access and Network-Coding in Diverse-Band Wireless Networks: Design and Evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Mobile Access and Network-Coding in Diverse-Band Wireless Networks: Design and Evaluation
title_sort mobile access and network-coding in diverse-band wireless networks: design and evaluation
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1911/71286
work_keys_str_mv AT giannoulisanastasios mobileaccessandnetworkcodingindiversebandwirelessnetworksdesignandevaluation
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