Fractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networks

Modern cellular systems feature increasingly dense base station deployments, augmented by multiple tiers of access points, in an effort to provide higher network capacity as user traffic, especially data traffic, increases. The primary limitation of these dense networks is co-channel interference. T...

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Main Author: Novlan, Thomas David
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5184
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2012-05-51842015-09-20T17:07:12ZFractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networksNovlan, Thomas DavidFractional frequency reuseStochastic geometryHeterogeneous cellular networksModern cellular systems feature increasingly dense base station deployments, augmented by multiple tiers of access points, in an effort to provide higher network capacity as user traffic, especially data traffic, increases. The primary limitation of these dense networks is co-channel interference. The primary source of interference is inter-cell and cross-tier interference, which is especially limiting for users near the boundary of the cells. Inter-cell interference coordination (ICIC) is a broad umbrella term for strategies to improve the performance of the network by having each cell allocate its resources such that the interference experienced in the network is minimized, while maximizing spatial reuse. Fractional frequency reuse (FFR) has been proposed as an ICIC technique in modern wireless networks. The basic idea of FFR is to partition the cell’s bandwidth so that (i) cell-edge users of adjacent cells do not interfere with each other and (ii) interference received by (and created by) cell-interior users is reduced, while (iii) improving spectral reuse compared to conventional frequency reuse. It is attractive for its intuitive implementation and relatively low network coordination requirements compared to other ICIC strategies including interference cancellation, network MIMO, and opportunistic scheduling. There are two common FFR deployment modes: Strict FFR and Soft Frequency Reuse (SFR). This dissertation identifies and addresses key technical challenges associated with fractional frequency reuse in modern cellular networks by utilizing an accurate yet tractable model of both the downlink (base station to mobile) and uplink (mobile to base station) based on the Poisson point process for modeling base station locations. The resulting expressions allow for the development of system design guidelines as a function of FFR parameters and show their impact on important metrics of coverage, rate, power control, and spectral efficiency. This new complete analytical framework addresses system design and performance differences in the uplink and downlink. Also, this model can be applied to cellular networks with multiple tiers of access points, often called heterogeneous cellular networks. The model allows for analysis as a function of system design parameters for users under Strict FFR and SFR with closed and open access between tiers.text2012-07-12T14:10:45Z2012-07-12T14:10:45Z2012-052012-07-12May 20122012-07-12T14:10:54Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-51842152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5184eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Fractional frequency reuse
Stochastic geometry
Heterogeneous cellular networks
spellingShingle Fractional frequency reuse
Stochastic geometry
Heterogeneous cellular networks
Novlan, Thomas David
Fractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networks
description Modern cellular systems feature increasingly dense base station deployments, augmented by multiple tiers of access points, in an effort to provide higher network capacity as user traffic, especially data traffic, increases. The primary limitation of these dense networks is co-channel interference. The primary source of interference is inter-cell and cross-tier interference, which is especially limiting for users near the boundary of the cells. Inter-cell interference coordination (ICIC) is a broad umbrella term for strategies to improve the performance of the network by having each cell allocate its resources such that the interference experienced in the network is minimized, while maximizing spatial reuse. Fractional frequency reuse (FFR) has been proposed as an ICIC technique in modern wireless networks. The basic idea of FFR is to partition the cell’s bandwidth so that (i) cell-edge users of adjacent cells do not interfere with each other and (ii) interference received by (and created by) cell-interior users is reduced, while (iii) improving spectral reuse compared to conventional frequency reuse. It is attractive for its intuitive implementation and relatively low network coordination requirements compared to other ICIC strategies including interference cancellation, network MIMO, and opportunistic scheduling. There are two common FFR deployment modes: Strict FFR and Soft Frequency Reuse (SFR). This dissertation identifies and addresses key technical challenges associated with fractional frequency reuse in modern cellular networks by utilizing an accurate yet tractable model of both the downlink (base station to mobile) and uplink (mobile to base station) based on the Poisson point process for modeling base station locations. The resulting expressions allow for the development of system design guidelines as a function of FFR parameters and show their impact on important metrics of coverage, rate, power control, and spectral efficiency. This new complete analytical framework addresses system design and performance differences in the uplink and downlink. Also, this model can be applied to cellular networks with multiple tiers of access points, often called heterogeneous cellular networks. The model allows for analysis as a function of system design parameters for users under Strict FFR and SFR with closed and open access between tiers. === text
author Novlan, Thomas David
author_facet Novlan, Thomas David
author_sort Novlan, Thomas David
title Fractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networks
title_short Fractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networks
title_full Fractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networks
title_fullStr Fractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networks
title_full_unstemmed Fractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networks
title_sort fractional frequency reuse for multi-tier cellular networks
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5184
work_keys_str_mv AT novlanthomasdavid fractionalfrequencyreuseformultitiercellularnetworks
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