Title :
Hard Fairness Versus Proportional Fairness in Wireless Communications: The Single-Cell Case
Author :
Caire, Giuseppe ; Müller, Ralf R. ; Knopp, Raymond
Author_Institution :
Ming Hsieh Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
fDate :
4/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We consider a wireless communication system formed by a single cell with one base station and K user terminals. User channels are characterized by frequency-selective fading due to small-scale effects, modeled as a set of M parallel block-fading channels, and a frequency-flat distance-dependent path loss. We compare delay-limited systems with variable-rate systems under fairness constraints, in terms of the achieved system spectral efficiency C (bit/s/Hz) versus Eb /N0. The considered delay-limited systems impose "hard-fairness": every user transmits at its desired rate on all blocks, independently of its fading conditions. The variable-rate system imposes "proportional fairness" via the popular Proportional Fair Scheduling (PFS) algorithm, currently implemented in 3G wireless for data (delay-tolerant) applications. We find simple iterative resource allocation algorithms that converge to the optimal delay-limited throughput for orthogonal (frequency-division multiple access (FDMA)/time-division multiple access (TDMA)) and optimal (superposition/interference cancellation) signaling. In the limit of large K and finite M we find closed-form expressions for C as a function of Eb/N0. We show that in this limit, the optimal allocation policy consists of letting each user transmit on its best subchannel only. Also, we find a simple closed-form expression for the throughput of PFS in a cellular environment, that holds for any K and M. Finally, we obtain closed-form expressions for C versus Eb/N 0 in the low and high spectral efficiency regimes. The conclusions of our analysis in terms of system design guidelines are as follows: a) if hard fairness is a requirement, orthogonal access incurs a large throughput penalty with respect to the optimal (superposition coding) strategy, especially in the regime of high spectral efficiency; b) for high spectral efficiency, PFS does not provide any significant gain and ma- y even perform worse than the optimal delay-limited system, despite the fact that the imposed fairness constraint is laxer; c) for low to moderate spectral efficiency, the stricter hard-fairness constraint incurs in a large throughput penalty with respect to PFS
Keywords :
3G mobile communication; cellular radio; channel capacity; fading channels; iterative methods; resource allocation; scheduling; 3G wireless communication system; base station; cellular radio environment; delay-limited system; frequency-selective fading channel; hard-fairness; iterative resource allocation algorithm; optimal allocation policy; optimal signaling; orthogonal FDMA/TDMA; proportional fair scheduling algorithm; proportional fairness; spectral efficiency; system throughput; variable-rate system; Base stations; Closed-form solution; Delay systems; Fading; Frequency; Iterative algorithms; Resource management; Scheduling algorithm; Throughput; Wireless communication; Code-division multiple access (CDMA); delay- limited capacity; proportional fair scheduling; uplink–downlink duality;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2007.892790