DocumentCode :
167040
Title :
Carrier Grade Wi-Fi: Air interface requirements and technologies
Author :
Xiaofei Wang ; Hanqing Lou ; Ghosh, M. ; Guodong Zhang ; Pengfei Xia ; Oteri, Oghenekome ; La Sita, Frank ; Olesen, Robert ; Shah, Neil
Author_Institution :
InterDigital Commun., LLC, Melville, NY, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
2-2 May 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
6
Abstract :
The IEEE 802.11 standardization group has recently ratified 802.11ac as the newest major amendment of the 802.11 family of Wi-Fi standards. While 802.11ac has specified a number of improvements over 802.11n such as: (i) 8 spatial streams (ii) mandatory bandwidth of 80 MHz and (iii) multi-user MIMO on the downlink, these improvements mostly target to improve the per-link throughput, and in case of MU-MIMO, traffic performance on the downlink. In order to satisfy the air interface high efficiency requirements and technologies, herein referred to broadly as 5G-Carrier Grade WiFi (5G-CGW), it is important to consider other metrics for system performance, such as area-throughput and Quality of Experience (QoE), which are more relevant in use cases where there can be a dense deployment of access points (APs), and stations (STAs). Recently, 802.11 started a study group called High Efficiency Wi-Fi (HEW) to develop the next generation of Wi-Fi physical (PHY) and medium access control (MAC) protocols that would satisfy these requirements. In this paper we will first provide an overview of the state-of-the-art in 802.11 standards, followed by a discussion on some of the limitations of 802.11ac in use cases of interest such as dense deployments in apartment buildings, stadiums and airports. We will provide an overview and preliminary simulation results of three technologies that have shown promise for meeting the requirements of CGW: (i) Multi-User Parallel Channel Access (MU-PCA) which would allow APs to simultaneously transmit to and to receive from a number of STAs in the frequency domain: enabled through multiplexing. This would alleviate the problem of underutilization of frequency resources caused by the need to support STAs of different bandwidths. (ii) Uplink Multi-User MIMO (UL MU-MIMO): IEEE 802.11ac standardized multi-user simultaneous transmissions in the downlink via downlink MU-MIMO. Uplink MU-MIMO needs to be defined to enable multiple users to share the spatia- domain and transmit at the same time in the uplink. (iii) Fractional CSMA and Transmit Power Control (TPC): In a dense deployment of APs, the performance of overlapping basic service sets (BSSs) can be improved by coordinating the transmitted power in the adjacent APs in such a manner that STAs on the edge of coverage face reduced interference.
Keywords :
IEEE standards; MIMO communication; bandwidth allocation; carrier sense multiple access; frequency-domain analysis; multiuser channels; protocols; quality of experience; wireless LAN; 5G-CGW; 5G-Carrier Grade WiFi; 802.11ac; BSS; HEW; IEEE 802.11 standardization group; MAC protocols; MU-PCA; PHY protocols; QoE; TPC; UL MU-MIMO; Wi-Fi physical protocols; Wi-Fi standards; access points; air interface high efficiency requirements; bandwidth 80 MHz; dense deployments; downlink MU-MIMO; downlink traffic performance; fractional CSMA; frequency domain; frequency resources underutilization; high efficiency Wi-Fi; medium access control; multiplexing; multiuser parallel channel access; multiuser simultaneous transmissions; overlapping basic service sets; per-link throughput; quality of experience; spatial domain; spatial streams; transmit power control; uplink multiuser MIMO; Bandwidth; Downlink; IEEE 802.11 Standards; Interference; Multiaccess communication; Throughput; Uplink; 5G; CGW; Carrier-Grade WiFi; Fractional CSMA; MU-PCA; TPC; UL MU-MIMO; WLAN; WiFi;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Systems, Applications and Technology Conference (LISAT), 2014 IEEE Long Island
Conference_Location :
Farmingdale, NY
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/LISAT.2014.6845194
Filename :
6845194
Link To Document :
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