Reuse partitioning in cellular networks in dynamic channel allocation
Wireless Networks
GSM, GPRS and EDGE Performance: Evolution Toward 3G/UMTS
GSM, GPRS and EDGE Performance: Evolution Toward 3G/UMTS
Channel assignment schemes for cellular mobile telecommunication systems: A comprehensive survey
IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials
Channel assignment scheme in hierarchical cellular system with multi-beam base-station
WiCOM'09 Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Wireless communications, networking and mobile computing
Performance analysis of a cellular network using frequency reuse partitioning
Performance Evaluation
Fractional Reuse Partitioning Schemes for Overlay Cellular Architectures
International Journal of Interdisciplinary Telecommunications and Networking
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In cellular communications, one of the main research issues is how to achieve optimum system capacity with limited frequency spectrum. For many years, researchers have proposed and studied many dynamic channel assignment (DCA) schemes to increase the capacity of cellular systems. Another proposed technique, Reuse Partitioning (RP), is used to achieve higher capacity by reducing the overall reuse distance. In convention, when RP is exploited in network-based DCA, a portion of channels will be assigned permanently to each partitioned region. However, the number of channels assigned to each region may not be~optimum due to factors like the uneven and time-varying traffics. In this paper, a new network-based DCA scheme is proposed with the flexible use of RP technique, named as flexible dynamic reuse partitioning with interference information (FDRP-WI). In this scheme, channels are open to all incoming calls and no channel pre-allocation for each region is required. As long as the channel assignment satisfies the co-channel interference constraints, any user from any region can use any channel. The scheme aims to minimize the effect of assigned channels on the availability of channels for use in the interfering cells and to reduce overall reuse distance. Both FDRP-WI with stationary users and mobile users are investigated. Simulation results have confirmed the effectiveness of FDRP-WI scheme. In the case with stationary users, FDRP-WI exhibits outstanding performance in improving the system capacity under both uniform and non-uniform traffic distributions. Under the uniform traffic case, the scheme can provide over 100% capacity improvement as compared to conventional fixed channel assignment scheme with 70 system channels at 1% blocking probability. In the case with mobile users, the impact of mobility on the new call probability, P b, and the call dropping probability, P d, is evaluated. The effect on system capacity of reserving some channels for handoff calls is first studied. Then, we propose a new handoff scheme, called "Reverse Overflow" (RO), to improve the utilization of channels with smaller reuse distances under mobile environment. Simulation results show that, with RO handoff, the system capacity of FDRP-WI is effectively improved at the expense of higher handoff rates in the cellular system.