JOURNAL ARTICLE

Analytical Evaluation of Fractional Frequency Reuse for Heterogeneous Cellular Networks

Thomas NovlanRadha Krishna GantiArunabha GhoshJeffrey G. Andrews

Year: 2012 Journal:   IEEE Transactions on Communications Vol: 60 (7)Pages: 2029-2039   Publisher: IEEE Communications Society

Abstract

Interference management techniques are critical to the performance of heterogeneous cellular networks, which will have dense and overlapping coverage areas, and experience high levels of interference. Fractional frequency reuse (FFR) is an attractive interference management technique due to its low complexity and overhead, and significant coverage improvement for low-percentile (cell-edge) users. Instead of relying on system simulations based on deterministic access point locations, this paper instead proposes an analytical model for evaluating Strict FFR and Soft Frequency Reuse (SFR) deployments based on the spatial Poisson point process. Our results both capture the non-uniformity of heterogeneous deployments and produce tractable expressions which can be used for system design with Strict FFR and SFR. We observe that the use of Strict FFR bands reserved for the users of each tier with the lowest average \sinr provides the highest gains in terms of coverage and rate, while the use of SFR allows for more efficient use of shared spectrum between the tiers, while still mitigating much of the interference. Additionally, in the context of multi-tier networks with closed access in some tiers, the proposed framework shows the impact of cross-tier interference on closed access FFR, and informs the selection of key FFR parameters in open access.

Keywords:
Computer science Interference (communication) Overhead (engineering) Poisson point process Context (archaeology) Reuse Frequency reuse Poisson distribution Computer network Distributed computing Channel (broadcasting) Mathematics Base station Engineering

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191
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28.05
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
32
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1.00
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Citation History

Topics

Wireless Communication Networks Research
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
Advanced MIMO Systems Optimization
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced Wireless Communication Techniques
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
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