DocumentCode :
77716
Title :
Fundamentals of Throughput Maximization With Random Arrivals for M2M Communications
Author :
Dhillon, Harpreet S. ; Huang, Heng ; Viswanathan, Harish ; Valenzuela, Reinaldo A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Virginia Polytech. Inst. & State Univ., Blacksburg, VA, USA
Volume :
62
Issue :
11
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Nov. 2014
Firstpage :
4094
Lastpage :
4109
Abstract :
For wireless systems in which randomly arriving devices attempt to transmit a fixed payload to a central receiver, we develop a framework to characterize the system throughput as a function of arrival rate and per-device data rate. The framework considers both coordinated transmission (where devices are scheduled) and uncoordinated transmission (where devices communicate on a random access channel and a provision is made for retransmissions). Our main contribution is a novel characterization of the optimal throughput for the case of uncoordinated transmission and a strategy for achieving this throughput that relies on overlapping transmissions and joint decoding. Simulations for a noise-limited cellular network show that the optimal strategy provides a factor of four improvement in throughput compared with slotted ALOHA. We apply our framework to evaluate more general system-level designs that account for overhead signaling. We demonstrate that, for small payload sizes relevant for machine-to-machine (M2M) communications (200 bits or less), a one-stage strategy, where identity and data are transmitted optimally over the random access channel, can support at least twice the number of devices compared with a conventional strategy, where identity is established over an initial random-access stage and data transmission is scheduled.
Keywords :
access protocols; cellular radio; optimisation; telecommunication signalling; ALOHA; M2M communications; data transmission; joint decoding; machine-to-machine communications; noise-limited cellular network; overhead signaling; random access channel; random arrivals; throughput maximization; uncoordinated transmission; Bandwidth; Base stations; Frequency division multiaccess; Payloads; Performance evaluation; Signal to noise ratio; Throughput; Machine-to-machine communications; cellular network; random arrivals; throughput maximization; wireless access;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0090-6778
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TCOMM.2014.2359222
Filename :
6905755
Link To Document :
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