Title
A Dynamic Inter-cellular Bandwidth Fair Sharing scheduler for future wireless networks.
Abstract
Due the limitation of the frequency spectrum, channel assignment remains a main challenge in future wireless networks. In this context, the Inter-cellular Scheduling Scheme consists in dynamically allocating/reallocating the bandwidth to the cells, adapting it to the inhomogeneous traffic distribution that appears in a multi-cell environment. More precisely, it dynamically selects the cell that experiences the highest difficulties and grants it supplementary radio resources borrowed from its neighboring under-loaded donor ones. In this paper, we introduce and explain the concept of minimal bandwidth, which corresponds to the minimal amount of radio resources that an under-loaded cell must keep in order to be protected from sudden and uneven high bit rates peaks. This minimal bandwidth guarantees a minimal service. The majority of the existing works on dynamic channel assignment neglects the use of this important parameter or consider it as a static one. In this context, we introduce a novel multicellular scheduler called Dynamic Inter-cellular Bandwidth Fair Sharing that dynamically computes the minimal bandwidth of a cell according to its ratio of used bandwidth and available bandwidth. In the first step, the proposed solution is applied to the channel assignment scheme Reuse 3 and compared to a state of the art inter-cellular scheduling strategy in order to underline the benefits of the dynamic minimal bandwidth adaptation. In the second step, we have applied our methodology to the Fractional Frequency Reuse (FFR) scheme and compared it to the four frequency allocation schemes, Reuse 1, Reuse 3, FFR and Soft Frequency Reuse (SFR), as well as to a reference Dynamic FFR (D-FFR) solution that does not take into consideration the needs of the cells in terms of minimal bandwidth while redistributing the radio resources. Simulation results show that although the D-FFR scheme enhances the performances of the overloaded cell, it deteriorates the performance of the neighboring under-loaded ones. On the contrary, our solution called FFRDIBFS improves the provided Quality of Service (QoS) of both the congested cells and the whole cellular network.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1016/j.phycom.2017.09.002
Physical Communication
Keywords
Field
DocType
Wireless networks,Channel assignment schemes,Load balancing,Scheduling,Quality of Service
Wireless network,Reuse,Computer science,Scheduling (computing),Computer network,Quality of service,Communication channel,Real-time computing,Bandwidth (signal processing),Dynamic bandwidth allocation,Cellular network
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
25
P1
1874-4907
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.36
27
Authors
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Mahdi Ezzaouia110.36
Cedric Gueguen2156.12
Ammar Mahmoud3477.24
Sébastien Baey492.30
Xavier Lagrange524739.58
Ammar Bouallégue65725.00