Title :
Base station placement for in-building mobile communication systems to yield high capacity and efficiency
Author :
Butterworth, Keith S. ; Sowerby, Kevin W. ; Williamson, Allan G.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Auckland Univ., New Zealand
fDate :
4/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A study is made of the problem of placing base stations to yield high capacity and efficiency in an in-building direct-sequence code-division multiple-access wireless communication system. A key requirement for solving this problem is a reliable but simple model of in-building propagation. A number of propagation models are considered as part of a system´s performance analysis and are found to produce widely ranging levels of accuracy. Correlated shadowing is identified as being a `key´in-building propagation characteristic that has the potential to strongly influence the system´s performance. Propagation models that included correlated shadowing are shown to produce the most accurate estimates of outage probability when there are a number of interferers facing a user. Base station deployment is shown to be a dominant factor influencing the levels of correlated shadowing, and consequently, base station deployment is shown to have major implications on the system´s performance. The system´s performance for a variety of base station deployment strategies has been determined. The results indicate that there is a tradeoff between system simplicity and performance
Keywords :
Rayleigh channels; UHF radio propagation; code division multiple access; correlation methods; indoor radio; land mobile radio; multiuser channels; probability; radiofrequency interference; spread spectrum communication; 1.8 GHz; DS-CDMA; Rayleigh fading; UHF; base station placement; correlated shadowing; direct-sequence code-division multiple-access; high capacity; high efficiency; in-building mobile communication systems; in-building propagation; interferers; outage probability estimates; propagation models; system performance analysis; system simplicity; wireless communication system; Base stations; Buildings; Channel capacity; Mobile communication; Multiaccess communication; Propagation losses; Shadow mapping; System performance; Systems engineering and theory; Wireless communication;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on