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Multitier Wireless Networks

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Multitier Wireless Networks And Other Research Areas Shalinee Kishore Assistant Professor Dept. of Electrical & Computer Engineering www.eecs.lehigh.edu/~skishore – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Multitier Wireless Networks


1
Multitier 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
2
Background
Multitier Wireless Networks contain radios whose
coverage areas vary in their order of magnitude.
Cellular Systems
Battlefield Communications
Fixed Wireless Networks
3
Background (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.

4
Motivation 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.

5
Research 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).

6
Key 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.

7
Some Specific Areas of Research
  • User Capacity and Coverage Area in Multitier
    Cellular CDMA Networks
  • Multitier Networks for Data Hotspots
  • Multitier (Hierarchical) Ad Hoc Networks

8
Reachback in Sensor Networks A Multitier Ad Hoc
Example
Higher-Tier Access Point
Antenna
Sensor
Cluster
Forwarding Node
9
Some 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.
10
Collaboration 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.

11
Collaboration 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.

12
More 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.).

13
Other 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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