Title :
Impacts of Radio Channel Characteristics, Heterogeneous Traffic Intensity, and Near–Far Effect on Rate Adaptive Scheduling Algorithms
Abstract :
Applying adaptive modulation combined with scheduling in a shared data channel can substantially improve the spectral efficiency for wireless systems. This performance gain results from the multiuser diversity, which exploited independent channel variations across multiple users. In this paper, we present a cross-layer analysis to integrate physical-layer channel characteristics, media access control (MAC) layer scheduling strategies, and the network layer issue of heterogeneous traffic intensity across near-far users. Specifically, for radio channel characteristics, we take account of path loss, slowly varying log-normal shadowing and fast-varying Nakagami fading. We also evaluate the impact of selective transmit diversity on the throughput and fairness of wireless data networks. Furthermore, we consider three MAC schedulers: random scheduler, greedy scheduler (GS), and a newly proposed queue-length-based scheduler (QS). By applying the proposed cross-layer analytical framework, the following insights can be gained. First, for the three considered schedulers, channel fluctuations induced by Nakagami fading or log-normal shadowing can improve both total throughput and fairness. Second, using selective transmit diversity can improve throughput, but is unfavorable for the fairness performance. Third, the GS and the QS methods can improve throughput at the expense of unfairness to the far users. However, the throughput improvement from using the GS and the QS decreases as the traffic intensity of the far user increases. In summary, this cross-layer analysis can be used to develop new scheduling mechanisms for achieving better tradeoff between the fairness and throughput for wireless data networks
Keywords :
Nakagami channels; access protocols; adaptive modulation; adaptive scheduling; data communication; diversity reception; log normal distribution; radio networks; telecommunication traffic; wireless channels; adaptive modulation; channel fluctuations; cross-layer analysis; fast-varying Nakagami fading; greedy scheduler; heterogeneous traffic intensity; independent channel variations; media access control layer scheduling strategies; multiple users; multiuser diversity; near-far effect; path loss; physical-layer channel characteristics; queue-length-based scheduler; radio channel characteristics; random scheduler; rate adaptive scheduling algorithms; selective transmit diversity; shared data channel; slowly varying log-normal shadowing; wireless data networks; wireless systems; Adaptive scheduling; Communication system traffic control; Fading; Fluctuations; Media Access Protocol; Performance gain; Scheduling algorithm; Shadow mapping; Throughput; Traffic control; Heterogeneous traffic intensity; near–far effect; rate adaptive scheduling;