DocumentCode
111145
Title
An overview of load balancing in hetnets: old myths and open problems
Author
Andrews, Jeffrey ; Singh, Sushil ; Qiaoyang Ye ; Xingqin Lin ; Dhillon, Harpreet
Volume
21
Issue
2
fYear
2014
fDate
Apr-14
Firstpage
18
Lastpage
25
Abstract
Matching the demand for resources ("load") with the supply of resources ("capacity") is a basic problem occurring across many fields of engineering, logistics, and economics, and has been considered extensively in both the Internet and wireless networks. The ongoing evolution of cellular communication networks into dense, organic, and irregular heterogeneous networks (HetNets) has elevated load awareness to a central problem, and introduces many new subtleties. This article explains how several long-standing assumptions about cellular networks need to be rethought in the context of a load-balanced HetNet: we highlight these as three deeply entrenched myths that we then dispel. We survey and compare the primary technical approaches to HetNet load balancing: (centralized) optimization, game theory, Markov decision processes, and the newly popular cell range expansion (a.k.a. biasing), and draw design lessons for OFDMA-based cellular systems. We also identify several open areas for future exploration.
Keywords
Internet; Markov processes; OFDM modulation; cellular radio; frequency division multiple access; game theory; optimisation; resource allocation; Internet; Markov decision process; OFDMA-based cellular systems; cellular communication networks; game theory; heterogeneous networks; load balancing; load-balanced HetNet; old myths; open problems; optimization; resource demand; resource supply; wireless networks; IEEE 802.11 Standards; Interference; Load management; Load modeling; Macrocell networks; Optimization; Signal to noise ratio;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Wireless Communications, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1284
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MWC.2014.6812287
Filename
6812287
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