DocumentCode
2508742
Title
Asymmetric Cooperation Among Relays with Linear Precoding
Author
Devroye, Natasha ; Mehta, Neelesh B. ; Molisch, Andreas F.
Author_Institution
Harvard Univ., Cambridge
fYear
2007
fDate
26-30 Nov. 2007
Firstpage
4391
Lastpage
4396
Abstract
Fixed and mobile relays are used, among other applications, in the downlink of cellular communications systems. Cooperation between relays can greatly increase their benefits in terms of extended coverage, increased reliability, and improved spectral efficiency. In this paper, we introduce the fundamental notion of asymmetric cooperation. For this, we consider a two-phase transmission protocol where, in the first phase, the base station (BS) sends several available messages to the relays over wireless links. But, depending on the channel state and the duration of the BS transmission, not all relays decode all messages. In a second phase, the relays, which may now have asymmetric message knowledge, use cooperative linear precoding for the transmission to the mobile stations. We show that for many channel configurations, asymmetric cooperation, although (slighlty) sub-optimum for the second phase, is optimum from a total-throughput point of view, as it requires less time and energy in the first phase. We give analytical formulations for the optimum operating parameters and the achievable throughput, and show that under typical circumstances, 20-30% throughput enhancement can be achieved over conventional systems.
Keywords
cellular radio; linear codes; precoding; radio links; transport protocols; asymmetric cooperation; base station; cellular communications systems; linear precoding; mobile relays; mobile stations; spectral efficiency; two-phase transmission protocol; wireless links; Base stations; Boosting; Costs; Decoding; Downlink; Land mobile radio cellular systems; Relays; Throughput; USA Councils; Wireless application protocol;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Global Telecommunications Conference, 2007. GLOBECOM '07. IEEE
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1042-2
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1043-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/GLOCOM.2007.835
Filename
4411745
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