DocumentCode :
25029
Title :
Bandwidth Reservation as a Coexistence Strategy in Opportunistic Spectrum Access Environments
Author :
Alcaraz, Juan J. ; Lopez-Martinez, Mario ; Vales-Alonso, Javier ; Garcia-Haro, Joan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. & Commun. Technol., Tech. Univ. of Cartagena (UPCT), Cartagena, Spain
Volume :
32
Issue :
3
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Mar-14
Firstpage :
478
Lastpage :
488
Abstract :
We consider a scenario in which a licensed wireless operator or primary network (PN) coexists with an ad-hoc, cognitive, secondary network. To minimize harmful interference on the primary users (PUs), secondary users (SUs) sense the PU activity on the licensed spectrum band before transmitting in spectrum opportunities. We study a bandwidth reservation (BR) scheme by which the PN keeps a set of adjacent channels free of PU transmissions. These reserved channels only accommodate PU traffic when all the non-reserved channels are used, and the SUs only occupy available channels within the reserved spectrum. Intuitively, this strategy reduces collision probability and simplifies the design of opportunistic spectrum access (OSA) mechanisms. However, from the point of view of the PN, BR entails a tradeoff between the benefits of an improved coexistence with SUs, and the capacity reduction associated to having fewer options for PU channel allocation. The main objective of this paper is to determine when BR improves the overall PN performance under SU activity. The SUs are characterized by a hardware limited radio, imperfect spectrum sensing, bayesian estimation of PU activity and multichannel access. Because PU capacity is the central issue, we assume a PN capable of exploiting all the available bandwidth at every moment. By means of a Markov-reward model, we compute the expected PU capacity with and without BR, considering propagation effects, interference and random locations. The results show that, in a non-congested PN with SU activity, the interference reduction capability of BR increases the overall capacity of the PN compared to not using BR.
Keywords :
Markov processes; ad hoc networks; bandwidth allocation; cognitive radio; interference suppression; probability; radio spectrum management; BR scheme; Bayesian estimation; Markov-reward model; OSA mechanism; PU activity; PU capacity; PU channel allocation; PU traffic; PU transmissions; SU activity; ad-hoc network; adjacent channels; bandwidth reservation scheme; capacity reduction; coexistence strategy; cognitive network; collision probability reduction; hardware-limited radio; imperfect spectrum sensing; interference location; interference minimization; interference reduction capability; licensed spectrum band; licensed wireless operator; multichannel access; noncongested PN; nonreserved channels; opportunistic spectrum access environment; opportunistic spectrum access mechanism; overall PN performance; primary network; primary users; propagation effect; random location; reserved channels; secondary network; secondary users; spectrum opportunities; Bandwidth; Hardware; Interference; Markov processes; Resource management; Sensors; Tin; Cognitive radio; Markov reward model; opportunistic spectrum access; radio spectrum management;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0733-8716
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSAC.2014.140309
Filename :
6683131
Link To Document :
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