Title :
A microcell/macrocell cellular architecture for low- and high-mobility wireless users
Author :
Chih-Lin, I. ; Greenstein, Larry J. ; Gitlin, Richard D.
Author_Institution :
AT&T Bell Lab., Holmdel, NJ, USA
fDate :
8/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Th authors explore the use of a wireless network having a two-tier architecture to serve both conventional mobile subscribers and quasi-stationary (e.g., PCN (personal communications network)) subscribers. The latter are served by microcells which are embedded within macrocells that serve the mobile users. This provides a balance between maximizing the number of users per unit area (which favors small cells) and minimizing the network control associated with handoff (which favors large cells). Four approaches to sharing the spectrum between the two tiers, using per-cell capacity as the measure, are evaluated. The first two feature spread-spectrum sharing, i.e., they use TDMA (time-division multiple access) among microcell users and CDMA (code-division multiple access) among macrocell users (System I), or vice versa (System II). The other two approaches feature orthogonal sharing, i.e., they use TDMA in both tiers, with time slots (System III) or frequency channels (System IV) partitioned so there is no overlap between tiers. Analysis shows that the capacity tradeoffs are poor for Systems I and II because of the large amounts of cross-tier interference: and that System IV gives the best capacity tradeoffs
Keywords :
cellular radio; code division multiple access; personal communication networks; time division multiple access; CDMA; PCN; TDMA; capacity tradeoffs; cellular architecture; code-division multiple access; interference; macrocells; microcells; network control; per-cell capacity; personal communications network; spread-spectrum sharing; time-division multiple access; wireless network; Communication system control; Frequency; Interference; Macrocell networks; Microcell networks; Multiaccess communication; Personal communication networks; Spread spectrum communication; Time division multiple access; Wireless networks;
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on