An Admission Control Mechanism for 5G LWA

To alleviate the spectrum scarcity problem in fifth-generation (5G) networks, traditional mobile data offloading schemes from long term evolution (LTE) to wireless local area networks (WLANs) have been revised by the third-generation partnership project (3GPP) in release 13, which is known as LTE-WL...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rojeena Bajracharya, Rakesh Shrestha, Sung Won Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
LTE
LWA
5G
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/6/1999
id doaj-949c57a84ec643089cb71f85d827eeea
record_format Article
spelling doaj-949c57a84ec643089cb71f85d827eeea2020-11-25T01:34:16ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-06-01106199910.3390/su10061999su10061999An Admission Control Mechanism for 5G LWARojeena Bajracharya0Rakesh Shrestha1Sung Won Kim2Department of Information and Communication Engineering, Yeungnam University, Gyeongsan si 38541, KoreaDepartment of Information and Communication Engineering, Yeungnam University, Gyeongsan si 38541, KoreaDepartment of Information and Communication Engineering, Yeungnam University, Gyeongsan si 38541, KoreaTo alleviate the spectrum scarcity problem in fifth-generation (5G) networks, traditional mobile data offloading schemes from long term evolution (LTE) to wireless local area networks (WLANs) have been revised by the third-generation partnership project (3GPP) in release 13, which is known as LTE-WLAN aggregation (LWA). With LWA, user equipment units (UEs) supporting both LTE and WLAN can utilize both LTE and WLAN links simultaneously. Thus, UEs under the coverage of an LWA network will be surrounded by multiple standards, such as LTE, WLAN, and LWA, along with cells of different sizes and coverage. Providing the LWA service to all UEs unconditionally may lead to serious intra-cell unfairness, degradation of system-level quality of service (QoS), and a reduction in system resource utilization. Hence, to resolve this issue, two important challenges need to be addressed: Which LTE UEs should be transferred, and how many LTE UEs need to be transferred. In this paper, we propose a user-offloading algorithm for evolved node B (eNB) hardware that smartly allocates the deprived LTE UEs and assigns the LWA service to an optimal number of UEs without degrading the QoS for existing WLAN UEs. With this proposed scheme, all LWA-preferred UEs with poor LTE performance and a good WLAN condition have the opportunity to access LWA service to improve performance. We show that the proposed scheme maximizes the throughput performance of the whole network.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/6/1999coexistenceLTELWAunlicensed bandWLAN5G
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rojeena Bajracharya
Rakesh Shrestha
Sung Won Kim
spellingShingle Rojeena Bajracharya
Rakesh Shrestha
Sung Won Kim
An Admission Control Mechanism for 5G LWA
Sustainability
coexistence
LTE
LWA
unlicensed band
WLAN
5G
author_facet Rojeena Bajracharya
Rakesh Shrestha
Sung Won Kim
author_sort Rojeena Bajracharya
title An Admission Control Mechanism for 5G LWA
title_short An Admission Control Mechanism for 5G LWA
title_full An Admission Control Mechanism for 5G LWA
title_fullStr An Admission Control Mechanism for 5G LWA
title_full_unstemmed An Admission Control Mechanism for 5G LWA
title_sort admission control mechanism for 5g lwa
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-06-01
description To alleviate the spectrum scarcity problem in fifth-generation (5G) networks, traditional mobile data offloading schemes from long term evolution (LTE) to wireless local area networks (WLANs) have been revised by the third-generation partnership project (3GPP) in release 13, which is known as LTE-WLAN aggregation (LWA). With LWA, user equipment units (UEs) supporting both LTE and WLAN can utilize both LTE and WLAN links simultaneously. Thus, UEs under the coverage of an LWA network will be surrounded by multiple standards, such as LTE, WLAN, and LWA, along with cells of different sizes and coverage. Providing the LWA service to all UEs unconditionally may lead to serious intra-cell unfairness, degradation of system-level quality of service (QoS), and a reduction in system resource utilization. Hence, to resolve this issue, two important challenges need to be addressed: Which LTE UEs should be transferred, and how many LTE UEs need to be transferred. In this paper, we propose a user-offloading algorithm for evolved node B (eNB) hardware that smartly allocates the deprived LTE UEs and assigns the LWA service to an optimal number of UEs without degrading the QoS for existing WLAN UEs. With this proposed scheme, all LWA-preferred UEs with poor LTE performance and a good WLAN condition have the opportunity to access LWA service to improve performance. We show that the proposed scheme maximizes the throughput performance of the whole network.
topic coexistence
LTE
LWA
unlicensed band
WLAN
5G
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/6/1999
work_keys_str_mv AT rojeenabajracharya anadmissioncontrolmechanismfor5glwa
AT rakeshshrestha anadmissioncontrolmechanismfor5glwa
AT sungwonkim anadmissioncontrolmechanismfor5glwa
AT rojeenabajracharya admissioncontrolmechanismfor5glwa
AT rakeshshrestha admissioncontrolmechanismfor5glwa
AT sungwonkim admissioncontrolmechanismfor5glwa
_version_ 1725073470754127872