Title :
Distributed power control in CDMA cellular systems
Author :
El-Osery, Aly ; Abdallah, Chaouki
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., New Mexico Univ., Albuquerque, NM, USA
fDate :
8/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In wireless cellular communication, it is essential to find effective means for power control of signals received from randomly dispersed users within one cell. Effective power control will heavily impact the system capacity. Distributed power control (DPC) is a natural choice for such purposes, because, unlike centralized power control, DPC does not require extensive computational power. Distributed power control should be able to adjust the power levels of each transmitted signal using only local measurements, so that, in a reasonable time, all users will maintain the desired signal-to-interference ratio. In this paper, we review different approaches for power control, focusing on CDMA systems. We also introduce state-space methods and linear quadratic power control (LQPC) to solve the power-control problem. A simulation environment was developed to compare LQPC with earlier approaches. The results show that LQPC is more effective, and is capable of computing the desired transmission power of each mobile station in fewer iterations, as well as being able to accommodate more users in the system
Keywords :
cellular radio; code division multiple access; distributed control; iterative methods; linear quadratic control; power control; telecommunication control; CDMA cellular systems; DPC; distributed power control; iteration; linear quadratic power control; mobile station; power levels; randomly dispersed users; signal-to-interference ratio; simulation environment; state-space methods; wireless cellular communication; Computational modeling; Dispersion; Distributed computing; Mobile computing; Multiaccess communication; Power control; Power measurement; State-space methods; Time measurement; Wireless communication;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation Magazine, IEEE