Title :
Too much mobility limits the capacity of wireless ad-hoc networks
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., California Univ., Irvine, CA, USA
fDate :
29 Nov.-3 Dec. 2004
Abstract :
We consider a K user isotropic fast fading ad-hoc network with no channel state information at any transmitter or receiver. Assuming that the users´ channels are identically distributed, we determine the capacity region of this ad-hoc network for any partition of the users into transmitters and receivers. The optimal strategy is such that only one pair of transmit-receive nodes is active at a time while all the other nodes are inactive. There is no benefit from cooperation and the total throughput grows at most double-logarithmically with the number of nodes. Even if the channel variations are slow enough that the receiver can track the channel perfectly, the inability of the transmitter to track the network topology limits the total throughput growth rate to no more than logarithmic in the number of nodes. Our analysis extends Hochwald and Marzetta´s single user Rayleigh fading AWGN channel result to show that under the more general model of an isotropic fading ad-hoc network with arbitrary distribution of additive noise there is no capacity benefit from increasing the number of transmit antennas beyond the channel coherence time Tc.
Keywords :
AWGN channels; Rayleigh channels; ad hoc networks; channel capacity; mobile radio; AWGN channel; channel coherence time; identically distributed user channels; isotropic fast fading ad-hoc network; mobile wireless ad-hoc networks; network capacity limits; single user Rayleigh fading channel; throughput growth rate; transmit antenna number; AWGN channels; Ad hoc networks; Additive noise; Channel state information; Fading; Network topology; Rayleigh channels; Throughput; Transmitters; Transmitting antennas;
Conference_Titel :
Global Telecommunications Conference, 2004. GLOBECOM '04. IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8794-5
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2004.1379005