Title: Multitier Wireless Networks
1Multitier Wireless Networks And Other Research
Areas
Shalinee Kishore Assistant Professor Dept. of
Electrical Computer Engineering www.eecs.lehigh.
edu/skishore Research Assistants Zhenlei
Shen, Yan Li, Norashikin Yahya
2Background
Multitier Wireless Networks contain radios whose
coverage areas vary in their order of magnitude.
Cellular Systems
Battlefield Communications
Fixed Wireless Networks
3Background (Contd)
- Higher tier radios have larger coverage area
and extend the - reach of the network.
- Lower tier radios used to enhance local
performance (e.g., - support higher number of users or deliver
higher data rates). - Result multitier networks can simultaneously
support - ubiquity and capacity, two
fundamental (and often - contradictory) goals of wireless
communication networks.
4Motivation for Research
- In the past, multitier systems have been studied
primarily in the - cellular context and assuming little or no
spectral reuse across - tiers.
- Types of services required from wireless
networks are becoming - increasingly varied ? critical and timely to
develop a unified - framework for multitier systems.
- Framework must include varying degrees of
spectral reuse and - address not only cellular but more ad hoc
network configurations.
5Research Goal
- Goal perform a novel and expansive study of
spectrally efficient - multitier architectures.
- Presently, we are studying centralized systems,
where user - terminals communicate strictly to multitier
access points. - We will also consider non-centralized
architectures where control - is distributed among network nodes (ad hoc
connections possible).
6Key Challenge Cross-Tier Interference
- High degree of spectral reuse implies cross-tier
interference. - Cross-tier interference due to transmissions
made by higher - tier radios may complicate reliable
communications at lower - tier radios.
Signal
Cross-Tier Interference
- Research studies signal processing methods,
radio resource - allocation schemes, and access control
techniques which jointly - suppress this interference to deliver desired
ubiquity and capacity.
7Some Specific Areas of Research
- User Capacity and Coverage Area in Multitier
Cellular CDMA Networks - Multitier Networks for Data Hotspots
- Multitier (Hierarchical) Ad Hoc Networks
8Reachback in Sensor Networks A Multitier Ad Hoc
Example
Higher-Tier Access Point
Antenna
Sensor
Cluster
Forwarding Node
9Some References
1 S. Kishore, et al., Capacity in a CDMA
Macrocell with a Hotspot Microcell Exact and
Approximate Analyses , IEEE Trans. on Wireless
Comm., March 2003. 2 S. Kishore, et al.,
Uplink User Capacity of a Multi-Cell CDMA System
with Hotspot Microcells , Proc. of Vehicular
Technology Conference S-02, May 2002. 3 S.
Kishore, et al., User Capacity in a CDMA
Macrocell with a Hotspot Microcell Effects of
Transmit Power Constraints and Channel Dispersion
, Proc. of IEEE Globecom, December 2003. 4
S. Kishore, et al., Downlink User Capacity in a
CDMA Macrocell with a Hotspot Microcell , Proc.
of IEEE Globecom, December 2003.
5 S. Kishore, et. al., Uplink Throughput in a
Single-Macrocell/Single-Microcell CDMA System,
with Application to Data Access Points , Proc.
of Vehicular Technology Conference F-03, October
2003.
10Collaboration with Susquehanna County, PA
- Multitier networks can be particularly
beneficial in serving - varied communication needs of remote,
under-served regions. - To demonstrate this, we will assist Susquehanna
County, a - rural and technology-poor community in
Northern PA to - meet its communication requirements.
- Specifically, its topographic and demographic
data will be - used as a testbed to implement our conclusions
and devise a - cohesive multitier system for the region.
11Collaboration with Susquehanna County, PA (Contd)
- The design will take into consideration
- extremely hilly propagation characteristics of
the area - locations of population centers (businesses,
schools, libraries,, - major roads, medical facilities, government
buildings, etc.), - communication requirements at these locations.
- Result will be a plan the county could use to
attract service - providers to the area.
- Collaboration is part of Lehigh University
Communication - Internship and Development (LUCID) Program.
12More on LUCID
- LUCID will also support internships for high
school students - and teachers from Susquehanna County to spend a
summer at - Lehigh learning basic principles of
communication systems, - Internetworking, wireless communications, etc.
- Skills learned may be used by participants to
improve - communication infrastructure in Susquehanna
County (for - example, installing wireless local area
networks at local - schools, businesses, etc.).
13Other Research Activities
- Quantifying diversity in wireless communication
systems - Using diversity models to improve channel
estimation, - adaptive radio resource allocation, etc.
General Research Interests
- Wireless Networking Theory
- Cross-Layer Design
- Interference Modeling
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