Interference Alignment Techniques for Heterogeneous Wireless Networks

Interference Alignment Techniques for Heterogeneous Wireless Networks
Author: Esra Aycan Beyazit
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

In this thesis, we study the stream selection based interference alignment (IA) algorithms, which can provide large multiplexing gain, to deal with the interference in the heterogeneous networks. Firstly, different deployment scenarios for the pico cells are investigated assuming perfect channel state information (CSI) at the transmitters.Two different stream selection IA algorithms are proposed for fully and partially connected interference networks and selecting at least one stream is guaranteed for each user. A stream sequence is selected among a predetermined set of sequences that mostly contribute to the sum-rate while performing an exhaustive search. In the proposed algorithms, the complexity of the exhaustive search is significantly decreased while keeping the performance relatively close. After selecting a stream, the interference generated between the selected and the unselected streams is aligned by orthogonal projections. Then, the influence of the imperfect CSI on the proposed algorithms is analyzed and it is observed that the intra-stream interference causes a significant degradation in the performance due to the quantization error. Therefore, we propose an algorithm for the limited feedback scheme. Finally, adaptive bit allocation schemes are presented to maximize the overall capacity for all the proposed algorithms. The performance evaluations are carried out considering different scenarios with different number and placements of pico cells. It is shown that the proposed algorithm for the limited feedback is more robust to channel imperfections compared to the existing IA algorithms.

Interference and Resource Management in Heterogeneous Wireless Networks

Interference and Resource Management in Heterogeneous Wireless Networks
Author: Jiandong Li
Publisher: Artech House
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2017-11-30
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1630815098

This authoritative resource offers a comprehensive overview of heterogeneous wireless networks, small cells, and device-to-device (D2D) communications. The book provides insight into network modeling and performance analysis of heterogeneous wireless networks. Interference management framework and design issues are covered as well as details about resource mobility, channel models, and typical and statistical interference modeling. This resource explains leveraging resource heterogeneity in interference mitigation and presents the challenges and feasible solutions for concurrent transmission. Moreover, complete coverage of interference alignment in MIMO heterogeneous networks for both downlink and uplink is presented. This book provides performance results for an ideal partially connected interference network as well as a practical heterogeneous network. Readers find practical guidance for LTE and LTE-Advanced as well as 5G in this resource. New techniques and designs for heterogeneous wireless networks are included.

Interference Mitigation and Energy Management in 5G Heterogeneous Cellular Networks

Interference Mitigation and Energy Management in 5G Heterogeneous Cellular Networks
Author: Yang, Chungang
Publisher: IGI Global
Total Pages: 383
Release: 2016-11-22
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1522517138

In recent years, wireless networks have become more ubiquitous and integrated into everyday life. As such, it is increasingly imperative to research new methods to boost cost-effectiveness for spectrum and energy efficiency. Interference Mitigation and Energy Management in 5G Heterogeneous Cellular Networks is a pivotal reference source for the latest research on emerging network architectures and mitigation technology to enhance cellular network performance and dependency. Featuring extensive coverage across a range of relevant perspectives and topics, such as interference alignment, resource allocation, and high-speed mobile environments, this book is ideally designed for engineers, professionals, practitioners, upper-level students, and academics seeking current research on interference and energy management for 5G heterogeneous cellular networks.

Interference Alignment

Interference Alignment
Author: Syed A. Jafar
Publisher: Now Publishers Inc
Total Pages: 147
Release: 2011
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 160198474X

Interference Alignment: A New Look at Signal Dimensions in a Communication Network provides both a tutorial and a survey of the state-of-art on the topic.

Feedback and Interference Alignment in Networks

Feedback and Interference Alignment in Networks
Author: Changho Suh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

The increasing complexity of communication networks in size and density provides us enormous opportunities to exploit interaction among multiple nodes, thus enabling higher date rate of data streams. On the flip side, however, this complexity comes with challenges in managing interference that multiple source-destination pairs in the network may cause to each other. In this dissertation, we make progress on how we exploit the opportunities, as well as how we overcome the challenges. In the first part, we find that feedback - one of the common ways to enable interaction in networks - has a promising role in improving the capacity performance of networks. Earlier results on feedback capacity were somewhat discouraging. This is mainly due to Shannon's original result on feedback capacity where he showed that in point-to-point communication, feedback does not increase capacity. Hence, traditionally it is believed that feedback has had little impact on increasing capacity of communication links. Therefore, the use of feedback has been limited to improving the reliability of communications, usually in the form of ARQ. In this dissertation, we show that in stark contrast to the point-to-point case, feedback can improve the capacity of interference-limited network. In fact, the improvement can be unbounded. This result shows that feedback can have a potentially significant role to play in mitigating interference. Also in the process of deriving this conclusion, we characterize the feedback capacity of the two-user Gaussian interference channel to within 2 bits, one of the longstanding open problems in network information theory. In the second part, we propose a new interference management technique for widely deployed cellular networks. Inspired by a recent breakthrough, the concept of interference alignment, we develop an interference alignment technique for cellular networks. Our technique promises almost interference-free communication with the increase of the number of clients in cellular networks. It shows substantial gain (around 30% to 60%) as compared to one of the interference management techniques in current cellular systems. In addition, it comes with implementation benefits: it can actually be implemented with small changes to emerging 4G cellular standards and architectures at the base-stations and clients. In particular, the required signal-processing circuitry, software control, and channel-state feedback mechanisms are extensions of existing implementations and standards. Lastly, we extend the interference alignment principle, developed in the context of wireless networks, into other fields of network research such as storage networks. In an effort to protect information against node failures, storage networks employ coding techniques, such as maximum distance separable (MDS) erasure codes, known as optimal codes in reliability with respect to redundancy. However, these MDS codes come with prohibitive maintenance cost when it comes to repairing failed storage nodes. While only partial information stored in the failed node needs to be recovered, the conventional MDS codes focus on the complete data recovery (including unwanted data, corresponding to interference) by downloading too much information from survivor storage encoded nodes, thus causing the high repair cost. Building on the connection between wireless and wireline networks, we leverage the interference alignment principle to develop a new class of MDS codes that significantly reduces the repair cost over the conventional MDS codes and also achieves information-theoretic optimal bound on the repair cost for all admissible code parameters.

Cognitive Radio and Networking for Heterogeneous Wireless Networks

Cognitive Radio and Networking for Heterogeneous Wireless Networks
Author: Maria-Gabriella Di Benedetto
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 423
Release: 2014-11-01
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3319017187

This book, written by leading experts from academia and industry, offers a condensed overview on hot topics among the Cognitive Radios and Networks scientific and industrial communities (including those considered within the framework of the European COST Action IC0902) and presents exciting visions for the future. Examples of the subjects considered include the design of new filter bank-based air interfaces for spectrum sharing, medium access control design protocols, the design of cloud-based radio access networks, an evolutionary vision for the development and deployment of cognitive TCP/IP, and regulations relevant to the development of a spectrum sharing market. The concluding chapter comprises a practical, hands-on tutorial for those interested in developing their own research test beds. By focusing on the most recent advances and future avenues, this book will assist researchers in understanding the current issues and solutions in Cognitive Radios and Networks designs.

Network Interference Management Via Interference Alignment

Network Interference Management Via Interference Alignment
Author: Viveck Ramesh Cadambe
Publisher:
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN: 9781124886572

Currently, we are witnessing a veritable explosion in the number of mobile devices with network connectivity. This explosion in the number of mobile devices which guzzle data is resulting in bandwidth becoming an increasingly scarce resource. The surge in the demand for data calls for new techniques to understand and improve the capacity (data rates) of wireless networks. In this thesis, I will describe and explore the benefits of interference alignment - a recently discovered technique to manage interference, which is the primary bottleneck of rates of communication in wireless communication networks. A primary object of study of this thesis is a communication network with K wireless transmitter-receiver pairs mutually interfering with each other, also known as the K user interference network. In this thesis, we study a high SNR approximation to its capacity known as the degrees of freedom. A widely held belief that influences design of most, if not all wireless networks is the following: in the K user interference network it is optimal from a network degrees of freedom perspective to divide the spectrum among the users like cutting a cake. This cake cutting view of spectrum access also known as orthogonalization enables each user in the interference network to get a fraction of 1/K degrees of freedom, i.e., 1/K of the spectrum free of interference. In this thesis, we will show that, from a degrees of freedom perspective, the belief in the optimality of the cake cutting view of spectrum access (i.e., orthogonalization) is flawed. We show that if the network is frequency-selective or time-varying, then each of the K users of an interference network can essentially get half the degrees of freedom of a single user (i.e., half the spectrum at high signal-to-noise ratios) simultaneously. In other words, each user can get ``half the cake'' rather than merely a fraction 1/K. The key to achieving this is the powerful interference management strategy of interference alignment. The thesis will study and develop various aspects of interference alignment. First, we develop an asymptotic alignment scheme to achieve ``half the cake'' in frequency-selective/time-varying interference channels. We then extend the idea of interference alignment to channels that are not frequency-selective or time-varying (i.e., channels which are constant) via three approaches: asymmetric complex signaling, a deterministic approach, and a distributed (numerical) alignment algorithm. In each of these cases, we will demonstrate degrees of freedom and capacity benefits of interference alignment in wireless interference networks. We also demonstrate practical benefits of the third approach - distributed alignment - in terms of rates at moderate signal-to-noise ratios and distributed implementations. Finally, we show that the impact of interference alignment extends beyond the context of just wireless systems. In particular, we explore an alternate application of the idea of alignment - erasure codes for distributed storage systems.

Relay-aided Interference Alignment in Wireless Networks

Relay-aided Interference Alignment in Wireless Networks
Author: Behzad Nourani
Publisher:
Total Pages: 99
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

Resource management in wireless networks is one of the key factors in maximizing the overall throughput. Contrary to popular belief, dividing the resources in a dense network does not yield the best results. A method that has been developed recently shares the spectrum amongst all the users in such a way that each node can potentially utilize about half of all the available resources. This new technique is often referred to as Interference Alignment and excels based on the fact that the amount of the network resources assigned to a user does not go to zero as the number of users in the network increases. Unfortunately it is still very difficult to implement the interference alignment concepts in practice. This thesis investigates some of the low-complexity solutions to integrate interference alignment ideas into the existing wireless networks. In the third and fourth chapters of this thesis, it is shown that introducing relays to a quasi-static wireless network can be very beneficial in terms of achieving higher degrees of freedom. The relays store the signals being communicated in the network and then send a linear combination of those signals. Using the proposed scheme, it is shown that although the relays cannot decode the original information, they can transform the equivalent channel in such a way that performing interference alignment becomes much easier. Investigating the required output power of the relays shows that it can scale either slower or faster than the output power of the main transmitters. This opens new doors for the applications that have constraints on the accessible output powers in the network nodes. The results are valid for both $X$ Channel and Interference Channel network topologies.

Interference Management with Limited Channel State Information in Wireless Networks

Interference Management with Limited Channel State Information in Wireless Networks
Author: Namyoon Lee
Publisher:
Total Pages: 582
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

Interference creates a fundamental barrier in attempting to improve throughput in wireless networks, especially when multiple concurrent transmissions share the wireless medium. In recent years, significant progress has been made on characterizing the capacity limits of wireless networks under the premise of global and instantaneous channel state information at transmitter (CSIT). In practice, however, the acquisition of such instantaneous and global CSIT as a means toward cooperation is highly challenging due to the distributed nature of transmitters and dynamic wireless propagation environments. In many limited CSIT scenarios, the promising gains from interference management strategies using instantaneous and global CSIT disappear, often providing the same result as cases where there is no CSIT. Is it possible to obtain substantial performance gains with limited CSIT in wireless networks, given previous evidence that there is marginal or no gain over the case with no CSIT? To shed light on the answer to this question, in this dissertation, I present several achievable sum of degrees of freedom (sum-DoF) characterizations of wireless networks. The sum-DoF is a coarse sum-capacity approximation of the networks, deemphasizing noise effects. These characterizations rely on a set of proposed and existing interference management strategies that exploit limited CSIT. I begin with the classical multi-user multiple-input-single-output (MISO) broadcast channel with delayed CSIT and show how CSI feedback delays change sum-capacity scaling law by proposing an innovative interference alignment technique called space-time interference alignment. Next, I consider interference networks with distributed and delayed CSIT and show how to optimally use distributed and moderately-delayed CSIT to yield the same sum-DoF as instantaneous and global CSIT using the idea of distributed space-time interference alignment. I also consider a two-hop layered multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) interference channel, where I show that two cascaded interfering links can be decomposed into two independent parallel relay channels without using CSIT at source nodes through the proposed interference-free relaying technique. Then I go beyond one-way and layered to multi-way and fully-connected wireless networks where I characterize the achievable sum-DoF of networks where no CSIT is available at source nodes using the proposed space-time physical-layer network coding. Lastly, I characterize analytical expressions for the sum spectral efficiency in a large-scale single-input-multiple- output (SIMO) interference network where the spatial locations of nodes are modeled by means of stochastic geometry. I derive analytical expressions for the ergodic sum spectral efficiency and the scaling laws as functions of relevant system parameters depending on different channel knowledge assumptions at receivers.