DocumentCode
1351686
Title
Analytical Evaluation of Fractional Frequency Reuse for OFDMA Cellular Networks
Author
Novlan, Thomas David ; Ganti, Radha Krishna ; Ghosh, Arunabha ; Andrews, Jeffrey G.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
Volume
10
Issue
12
fYear
2011
fDate
12/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
4294
Lastpage
4305
Abstract
Fractional frequency reuse (FFR) is an interference management technique well-suited to OFDMA-based cellular networks wherein the bandwidth of the cells is partitioned into regions with different frequency reuse factors. To date, FFR techniques have been typically been evaluated through system-level simulations using a hexagonal grid for the base station locations. This paper instead focuses on analytically evaluating the two main types of FFR deployments - Strict FFR and Soft Frequency Reuse (SFR) - using a Poisson point process to model the base station locations. The results are compared with the standard grid model and an actual urban deployment. Under reasonable special cases for modern cellular networks, our results reduce to simple closed-form expressions, which provide insight into system design guidelines and the relative merits of Strict FFR, SFR, universal reuse, and fixed frequency reuse. Finally, a SINR-proportional resource allocation strategy is proposed based on the analytical expressions and we observe that FFR provides an increase in the sum-rate as well as the well-known benefit of improved coverage for cell-edge users.
Keywords
OFDM modulation; cellular radio; resource allocation; stochastic processes; OFDMA cellular networks; Poisson point process; SINR-proportional resource allocation; base station locations; fractional frequency reuse; hexagonal grid; interference management; soft frequency reuse; strict FFR; Base stations; Downlink; Interference (signal); Mobile communication; OFDM; Power control; Signal to noise ratio; Fractional frequency reuse (FFR); cellular networks; inter-cell interference coordination (ICIC) techniques; soft frequency reuse (SFR);
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1276
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TWC.2011.100611.110181
Filename
6047548
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