Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells

The demand for higher data rates for indoor and cell-edge users led to evolution of small cells. LTE femtocells, one of the small cell categories, are low-power low-cost mobile base stations, which are deployed within the coverage area of the traditional macro base station. The cross-tier and co-tie...

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Main Author: Sawant, Uttara
Other Authors: Akl, Robert G.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of North Texas 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1062893/
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spelling ndltd-unt.edu-info-ark-67531-metadc10628932021-01-12T05:27:07Z Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells Sawant, Uttara wireless networks mobility management network optimization LTE-Advanced femtocells fractional frequency reuse Femtocells. Long-Term Evolution (Telecommunications) Wireless communication systems. The demand for higher data rates for indoor and cell-edge users led to evolution of small cells. LTE femtocells, one of the small cell categories, are low-power low-cost mobile base stations, which are deployed within the coverage area of the traditional macro base station. The cross-tier and co-tier interferences occur only when the macrocell and femtocell share the same frequency channels. Open access (OSG), closed access (CSG), and hybrid access are the three existing access-control methods that decide users' connectivity to the femtocell access point (FAP). We define a network performance function, network productivity, to measure the traffic that is carried successfully. In this dissertation, we evaluate call mobility in LTE integrated network and determine optimized network productivity with variable call arrival rate in given LTE deployment with femtocell access modes (OSG, CSG, HYBRID) for a given call blocking vector. The solution to the optimization is maximum network productivity and call arrival rates for all cells. In the second scenario, we evaluate call mobility in LTE integrated network with increasing femtocells and maximize network productivity with variable femtocells distribution per macrocell with constant call arrival rate in uniform LTE deployment with femtocell access modes (OSG, CSG, HYBRID) for a given call blocking vector. The solution to the optimization is maximum network productivity and call arrival rates for all cells for network deployment where peak productivity is identified. We analyze the effects of call mobility on network productivity by simulating low, high, and no mobility scenarios and study the impact based on offered load, handover traffic and blocking probabilities. Finally, we evaluate and optimize performance of fractional frequency reuse (FFR) mechanism and study the impact of proposed metric weighted user satisfaction with sectorized FFR configuration. University of North Texas Akl, Robert G. Dantu, Ram Fu, Song Yuan, Xiaohui 2017-12 Thesis or Dissertation x, 112 pages Text local-cont-no: submission_914 https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1062893/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc1062893 English Public Sawant, Uttara Copyright Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights Reserved.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic wireless networks
mobility management
network optimization
LTE-Advanced
femtocells
fractional frequency reuse
Femtocells.
Long-Term Evolution (Telecommunications)
Wireless communication systems.
spellingShingle wireless networks
mobility management
network optimization
LTE-Advanced
femtocells
fractional frequency reuse
Femtocells.
Long-Term Evolution (Telecommunications)
Wireless communication systems.
Sawant, Uttara
Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells
description The demand for higher data rates for indoor and cell-edge users led to evolution of small cells. LTE femtocells, one of the small cell categories, are low-power low-cost mobile base stations, which are deployed within the coverage area of the traditional macro base station. The cross-tier and co-tier interferences occur only when the macrocell and femtocell share the same frequency channels. Open access (OSG), closed access (CSG), and hybrid access are the three existing access-control methods that decide users' connectivity to the femtocell access point (FAP). We define a network performance function, network productivity, to measure the traffic that is carried successfully. In this dissertation, we evaluate call mobility in LTE integrated network and determine optimized network productivity with variable call arrival rate in given LTE deployment with femtocell access modes (OSG, CSG, HYBRID) for a given call blocking vector. The solution to the optimization is maximum network productivity and call arrival rates for all cells. In the second scenario, we evaluate call mobility in LTE integrated network with increasing femtocells and maximize network productivity with variable femtocells distribution per macrocell with constant call arrival rate in uniform LTE deployment with femtocell access modes (OSG, CSG, HYBRID) for a given call blocking vector. The solution to the optimization is maximum network productivity and call arrival rates for all cells for network deployment where peak productivity is identified. We analyze the effects of call mobility on network productivity by simulating low, high, and no mobility scenarios and study the impact based on offered load, handover traffic and blocking probabilities. Finally, we evaluate and optimize performance of fractional frequency reuse (FFR) mechanism and study the impact of proposed metric weighted user satisfaction with sectorized FFR configuration.
author2 Akl, Robert G.
author_facet Akl, Robert G.
Sawant, Uttara
author Sawant, Uttara
author_sort Sawant, Uttara
title Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells
title_short Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells
title_full Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells
title_fullStr Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells
title_sort evaluation of call mobility on network productivity in long term evolution advanced (lte-a) femtocells
publisher University of North Texas
publishDate 2017
url https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1062893/
work_keys_str_mv AT sawantuttara evaluationofcallmobilityonnetworkproductivityinlongtermevolutionadvancedlteafemtocells
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