DocumentCode :
1519843
Title :
REFIM: A Practical Interference Management in Heterogeneous Wireless Access Networks
Author :
Son, Kyuho ; Lee, Soohwan ; Yi, Yung ; Chong, Song
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Volume :
29
Issue :
6
fYear :
2011
fDate :
6/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1260
Lastpage :
1272
Abstract :
Due to the increasing demand of capacity in wireless cellular networks, the small cells such as pico and femto cells are becoming more popular to enjoy a spatial reuse gain, and thus cells with different sizes are expected to coexist in a complex manner. In such a heterogeneous environment, the role of interference management (IM) becomes of more importance, but technical challenges also increase, since the number of cell-edge users, suffering from severe interference from the neighboring cells, will naturally grow. In order to overcome low performance and/or high complexity of existing static and other dynamic IM algorithms, we propose a novel low-complex and fully distributed IM scheme, called REFIM (REFerence based Interference Management), in the downlink of heterogeneous multi-cell networks. We first formulate a general optimization problem that turns out to require intractable computation complexity for global optimality. To have a practical solution with low computational and signaling overhead, which is crucial for low-cost small-cell solutions, e.g., femto cells, in REFIM, we decompose it into per-BS (base station) problems based on the notion of reference user and reduce feedback overhead over backhauls both temporally and spatially. We evaluate REFIM through extensive simulations under various configurations, including the scenarios from a real deployment of BSs. We show that, compared to the schemes without IM, REFIM can yield more than 40% throughput improvement of cell-edge users while increasing the overall performance by 10~107%. This is equal to about 95% performance of the existing centralized IM algorithm (MC-IIWF) that is known to be near-optimal but hard to implement in practice due to prohibitive complexity. We also present that as long as interference is managed well, the spectrum sharing policy can outperform the best spectrum splitting policy where the number of subchannels is optimally divided between macro and femto cells.
Keywords :
cellular radio; computational complexity; optimisation; radio access networks; radiofrequency interference; telecommunication network management; MC-IIWF; REFIM; cell-edge users; dynamic IM algorithm; heterogeneous environment; heterogeneous multicell networks; heterogeneous wireless access networks; interference management; intractable computation complexity; low-cost small-cell solutions; optimization problem; reference based interference management; spectrum sharing policy; wireless cellular networks; Complexity theory; Indexes; Interference; Message passing; Power control; Resource management; Scheduling; Interference management; distributed algorithm; feedback reduction; femto cells; heterogeneous wireless access networks; power control; reference user; user scheduling;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0733-8716
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSAC.2011.110613
Filename :
5770670
Link To Document :
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