• DocumentCode
    3607022
  • Title

    Designing Resource-on-Demand Strategies for Dense WLANs

  • Author

    Debele, Fikru Getachew ; Meo, Michela ; Renga, Daniela ; Ricca, Marco ; Zhang, Yi

  • Author_Institution
    Dipt. di Elettron. e Telecomun., Politec. di Torino, Turin, Italy
  • Volume
    33
  • Issue
    12
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    2494
  • Lastpage
    2509
  • Abstract
    Being cheap and easy to deploy, dense WLANs are becoming the most popular solution to providing Internet access in locations where the population of users is large, such as on campuses, large enterprises, etc. The large density of access points (APs) comes from the need to have enough capacity to carry the traffic generated at peak hours although, in these scenarios, traffic varies a lot on a daily, weekly, or seasonal basis. During low or no traffic periods, APs are underutilized, even if they are consuming energy almost in the same amount as if they were fully loaded. Promising solutions to reducing this form of energy waste consist of activating only the number of APs that is strictly needed to carry the actual traffic; in other words, to make capacity dynamically adaptive through resource-on-demand (RoD) strategies. In this paper, we investigate the case of a portion of the dense WLAN on our campus. Through real trace analysis, we investigate users´ behavior in accessing the WLAN and formulate a stochastic characterization of it. We propose a simple model that describes RoD strategies and use it to study the system performance that is evaluated in terms of AP activity and inactivity periods, AP switching frequency, and energy saving. Finally, we present some results obtained by experimenting with RoD strategies in a portion of the WLAN. Our results show that RoD strategies for dense WLANs are feasible and effective in trading-off the opposite needs to save some energy and to guarantee a smooth network operation and high quality of service.
  • Keywords
    resource allocation; stochastic processes; telecommunication power management; wireless LAN; WLAN; access point activation; dynamically adaptive capacity; energy saving; energy waste reduction; quality of service; resource-on-demand strategy; stochastic user behavior; Analytical models; Energy efficiency; Exponential distribution; Green communications; IEEE 802.11 Standard; Resource management; Steady-state; Wireless LAN; Resource-on-Demand; Resource-on-demand (RoD); dense WLANs; energy saving; modeling; trace analysis;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0733-8716
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JSAC.2015.2482007
  • Filename
    7276975