Title :
A non-blocking channel assignment strategy for hand-offs
Author :
Lin, Yi-Bing ; Noerpel, Anthony ; Harasty, Daniel
Author_Institution :
Bellcore, Red Bank, NJ, USA
fDate :
27 Sep-1 Oct 1994
Abstract :
A new PCS hand-off scheme is proposed. This scheme provides for hand-off to radio ports on which there is no free channel by “sub-rating” an existing connection. With sub-rating, an occupied full-rate channel is temporarily divided into two half-rate channels: one to serve the existing call and the other to serve the hand-off request. The blocking probabilities (combined forced terminations of existing calls and blocking of new call attempts) of this new scheme compare favorably with the standard (non-prioritizing) schemes and the previously proposed prioritizing schemes. The “costs” for this scheme are presented and discussed, as well as the additional procedural complexity to implement on-the-fly sub-rating, and the impact of continuing the conversation on a lower rate channel (which may have lower speech quality or increase battery drain). Simulation experiments investigating the traffic impacts are presented, as are the results which show that even in the highest offered load considered, a 3 minute conversation in the busy hour experiences less than half a second of sub-rated conversation on average, and only about 1% of the calls experience more than 30 seconds of sub-rated conversation. This scheme can increase capacity by 8% to 35% for systems with 1% call incompletion probability
Keywords :
frequency allocation; land mobile radio; personal communication networks; probability; radio spectrum management; telecommunication services; telecommunication traffic; PCS; blocking probabilities; call incompletion probability; forced terminations; half-rate channels; hand-offs; lower rate channel; non-blocking channel assignment; occupied full-rate channel; offered load; personal communications service; procedural complexity; radio ports; simulation experiments; speech quality; sub-rated conversation; sub-rating; systems capacity; traffic; Capacity planning; Communication switching; Costs; Frequency; Network servers; Personal communication networks; Speech; Telephony; Traffic control;
Conference_Titel :
Universal Personal Communications, 1994. Record., 1994 Third Annual International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1823-4
DOI :
10.1109/ICUPC.1994.383098