Title :
Mobility-oriented guard channel assignment for personal communication systems
Author :
Jiang, Yan ; Bhargava, Vijay K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Victoria Univ., BC, Canada
Abstract :
Personal communications systems (PCS) represent a rapidly growing and increasingly important segment of the telecommunication industry. We investigate the issue of mobility-oriented guard channel assignment in a mixed traffic load environment. According to different generation sources, calls are first distinguished between handoff and original calls. The original calls are further divided into four classes based on their different mobility and load characteristics, i.e., high load/high mobility; low load/high mobility; high load/low mobility; low load/low mobility. In order to reduce the forced termination of handoff calls, the priority is given to high mobility calls over low mobility calls, and with the same mobility level, high load calls are assumed to have the priority over low load calls. We compare the forced termination and uncompleted call probabilities when assigning different sets of guard channels to the handoff and prioritized original calls. The analytical model presented can effectively cover a wide range of mobility and load levels
Keywords :
cellular radio; frequency allocation; personal communication networks; PCS; forced termination; handoff calls; high load/high mobility class; high load/low mobility class; high mobility calls; low load/high mobility class; low load/low mobility class; low mobility calls; mixed traffic load environment; mobility-oriented guard channel assignment; original calls; personal communication systems; Analytical models; Communication industry; Electric breakdown; Personal communication networks; Telecommunication computing; Telecommunication traffic; Vehicle dynamics;
Conference_Titel :
Personal Wireless Communications, 1997 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Mumbai
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4298-4
DOI :
10.1109/ICPWC.1997.655469