This application claims the priority of Japanese Patent Application No. 2013-194816, filed on Sep. 20, 2013, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a wireless communication system.
2. Description of the Related Art
As a result of the widespread use of smartphones, tablet terminals and the like, there is a concern for an explosive increase in wireless traffic. In order to accommodate such increasing wireless traffic, the capacity for wireless traffic (wireless communication capacity) needs to be increased. As a technology for increasing the wireless communication capacity, a small cell configuration is gaining attention in which a service area is covered by a number of low transmission power base stations with narrow communication areas. In the long term evolution (LTE) standard, which is a next-generation wireless communication standard, the base station may be referred to as an E-UTRAN NodeB (eNB), and a terminal as user equipment (UE).
The small cell is referred to as a microcell, a picocell, or a femtocell, for example. The base station covering the small cell is referred to as a micro base station (micro eNB), a pico base station (pico eNB), or a femto base station (femto eNB), for example. The femto base station may also be referred to as a Home eNB (HeNB). Meanwhile, a base station with high transmission power and a wide communication area is referred to as a macro base station (macro eNB), and the communication area of the macro base station is referred to as a macrocell.
Generally, the wireless communication capacity can be increased by making the cell smaller and providing a number of such small cells. When the cell is made smaller, the distance between terminals and the base station is decreased. As a result, attenuation of radio waves may be reduced, resulting in improved communication quality.
On the other hand, when a number of small cells are disposed at high density, communication quality may be significantly decreased by radio wave interference between different cells at the boundary of the communication areas of the cells (referred to as a “cell boundary”). Particularly, in the small cell, because the area of one cell is narrow compared with the macrocell, it is believed difficult to adopt, prior to the installation of the base station, a cell design such that an area in which terminals are less likely to be distributed is located at the cell boundary. Thus, it can be expected that the distribution of the terminals in the cell will be greatly varied depending on the time. For example, in a certain cell at a certain time, a number of terminals may be distributed near the cell boundary. As a result, communication quality may be lowered by inter-cell interference. Further, handovers for switching the cells to which the terminals connect will be frequently generated, increasing the process delay due to transmission and reception of control signals, synchronization with a new cell and the like, and lowering communication efficiency.
As a technology for decreasing inter-cell interference, fractional frequency reuse (FFR) is known. According to the FFR technology, the transmission power of the base station is varied on a frequency by frequency basis and controlled such that frequencies with high transmission power are not overlapped between base stations, thus decreasing interference. FFR is discussed in JP-2012-500524-W, for example.
As another technology for decreasing inter-cell interference, coordinated multi point operation (CoMP) is known, which is a technology for coordinated transmission and reception between base stations.
According to FFR or CoMP, the inter-cell interference can be decreased. However, handovers do occur due to movements between cells. Thus, the technologies cannot solve the problem of the decrease in communication efficiency due to the occurrence of frequent handovers. Further, in order to perform CoMP, the terminals need to be adapted for the signal transmission and reception with a plurality of cells, which may increase the complexity of the terminals for supporting this function. Thus, whether CoMP can be applied depends on the support function of the terminals, and CoMP may not be applicable to all of the terminals.
As a technology for achieving a decrease in handovers in a small cell, dual connectivity is being considered. Dual connectivity is contemplated for application in a network configuration in which a number of small cells are disposed in a macrocell in an overlapping manner. Such network configuration may be referred to as a heterogeneous network (HetNet). The macrocell and the small cells use different frequency carriers. In dual connectivity, the macrocell ensures coverage, while the small cells are responsible for increasing wireless capacity. The terminals perform communications using both the macrocell and the small cells. When a terminal moves into a different small cell, the small cells are switched while connection with the macrocell is maintained. Thus, even when the small cell is modified, handover can be decreased because the connection with the macrocell is maintained.
However, in the case of dual connectivity, the terminals also need to support the function for communication with a plurality of cells, and dual connectivity may not be applicable to all of the terminals, as in the case of CoMP. There is also the possibility that dual connectivity cannot be applied due to the absence of a macrocell coverage at the location of a small cell.
The present invention was made in view of the above, and is directed to enabling an improvement in communication quality and a decrease in handover in a wireless communication system. Particularly, the present invention is directed to a wireless communication system including a number of small cells, where communication quality is increased by a decrease in inter-cell interference and a decrease in handover even when a number of terminals are distributed near a cell boundary, or when a terminal that does not support CoMP or dual connectivity is present.
The outline of a representative aspect of the present invention disclosed herein is as follows.
A base station includes a plurality of radio units that communicate with a terminal; and a control device connected to the plurality of radio units. When there are a large number of terminals positioned at a boundary of communication areas of a first radio unit and a second radio unit among the plurality of radio units, the control device makes a first cell ID of the first radio unit and a second cell ID of the second radio unit being identical.
According to the present invention, communication quality can be increased and handover can be decreased in a wireless communication system. Particularly, in a wireless communication system including a number of small cells, when a number of terminals are distributed near a cell boundary, or when there is a terminal that does not support CoMP or dual connectivity, an increase in communication quality and a decrease in handover can be achieved by a decrease in inter-cell interference.
Other objects, configurations and effects of the invention will become apparent from the following description of embodiments.
In the following, embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to the drawings.
While the following description of embodiments may be divided into a plurality of sections or embodiments as needed for convenience, they are not mutually unrelated unless specifically noted otherwise, and are in a relationship such that one may be a part of the other or a modification, a detail, a supplementary description or the like of the whole, for example. The embodiments may be implemented individually or in combination.
Further, in the following embodiments, when references are made to the number of elements and the like (including the number of items, numerical values, amounts, and ranges), the embodiments are not limited to the specific numbers, and more or less than the specific number may be used unless specifically noted otherwise, or unless the embodiments are obviously limited to the specific number in principle.
It should be obvious that in the following embodiments, the constituent elements and the like (including element steps and the like) may not necessarily be required unless specifically noted otherwise or unless obviously considered indispensable in principle.
Similarly, in the following embodiments, when references. are made to the shape of constituent elements, their positional relationship and the like, the shape and the like may include substantially approximate or similar shapes unless specifically noted otherwise or unless the shapes are obviously not the case in principle. This also applies to the numerical values or ranges.
Referring to
Without loss of generality in description, in the following, the small cell base stations 103 will be denoted as a remote unit (RU) 103, and the control device 105 will be denoted as a center unit (CU) 105. The system including RU 103 and CU 105 may be referred to as a cloud-radio access network or centralized-RAN (C-RAN) system, or a C-RAN base station.
In such a small cell environment, a large number of terminals may be distributed near the cell boundary, such as of the small cells 104 formed by RUs 103-2 and 103-3 in
The present invention provides a wireless communication system, a base station, and a base station control method by which the above problems can be solved.
In a first embodiment, it is contemplated that each RU 103 uses a single frequency carrier.
CU 105 collects terminal distribution information on the basis of information reported from the terminals 106 communicating with each RU 103, and detects the area in which a number of terminals are distributed near the cell boundary, and RU 103 covering the area. In the example of
Thus, CU 105 detects that a large number of terminals are distributed near the boundary of the communication areas of certain RUs 103, and allocates an identical cell ID to a plurality of RUs 103 covering the area. In this way, the communication quality of an area having the problem of a decrease in communication quality due to inter-cell interference or frequent handovers can be increased, and handovers can be decreased.
However, when a plurality of RUs 103 are given with an identical cell ID, if signals are transmitted to all of the terminals 106 using the multiple RUs 103 to which the terminals are connected, the number of terminals that can communicate simultaneously, i.e., the amount of wireless resources available per terminal, may be decreased, resulting in a decrease in throughput compared with when different cell IDs are allocated. For example, because the influence of inter-cell interference is small on the terminals 106 positioned at the center of the communication area of RU 103 (such as terminals 106-1 and 106-3 in
A method of solving the above problem will be described below. The LTE standard includes a transmission mode using the above-described CRS as a reference signal (referred to as Transmission Mode), and a transmission mode using a reference signal for demodulation (referred to as demodulation RS (DMRS) or UE specific RS). CRS includes a sequence unique to the cell ID, and cannot be transmitted from only some of the plurality of RUs 103 having an identical cell ID. This is because CRS is used not only for demodulation of data but also for reception power measurement, control channel demodulation, and demodulation of broadcast signal or paging, and is therefore received by terminals other than the data receiving terminal. Namely, it may be said that the size of the cell is determined by the area in which CRS can be received. Thus, for CRS, the same signal is transmitted from a plurality of RUs 103 having the identical cell ID. Accordingly, if data is transmitted only from a single RU 103, the channel of the data and the channel estimated from CRS would not correspond to each other, thus lowering reception performance.
On the other hand, DMRS is a dedicated reference signal for data demodulation, and may be transmitted from only some of the plurality of RUs 103 having an identical cell ID. Thus, to the terminals 106 positioned at the center of the communication area of RU 103, such as terminals 106-1 and 106-3 in
Based on the foregoing, the operation in the case where an identical cell ID is allocated to a plurality of RUs 103 is as follows.
In the terminals 106 positioned at the center of the communication area of RUs 103 to which an identical cell ID is allocated, a transmission mode using DMRS (such as TM7, 8, 9, or 10) is set, and signals are transmitted using a single RU 103.
In the terminals 106 positioned near the boundary of the communication areas of RUs 103 to which an identical cell ID is allocated, a transmission mode using CRS or a transmission mode using DMRS is set, and signals are transmitted using a plurality of RUs 103. When signals of different terminals 106 are transmitted from different RUs 103 having an identical cell ID, different DMRS antenna port numbers or signal sequences (scramble sequences) are used.
The transmission using a plurality of RUs 103 and the transmission using a single RU 103 may be handled as an example of multi-user multiple input multiple output (MIMO) or beamforming, rather than the CoMP function. In multi-user MIMO, simultaneous communications with a plurality of terminals are performed using a plurality of antennas and the same wireless resources. On the other hand, in single user MIMO, communication with a single terminal is performed using a plurality of antennas. Multi-user MIMO is a MIMO precoding control method for preventing mutual interference between signals from simultaneously communicating terminals by the use of a directional beam. Meanwhile, the method where communications with different terminals are performed using one of the plurality of RUs 103 having an identical cell ID may be considered to be a multi-user MIMO in that simultaneous communications are performed with a plurality of terminals using different RUs 103 such that mutual interference can be decreased by radio wave attenuation. Also, in the present embodiment, the method of communicating with a single terminal using a plurality of RUs 103 may be considered to be a single user MIMO.
The terminals 106 also measure the communication quality and channel information of the connected cell, and feedback a measurement result to the base station. The feedback information is referred to as channel state information (CSI). The CSI includes, for example, a channel quality indicator (CQI) indicating communication quality, a precoding matrix indicator (PMI) indicating MIMO precoding information, and a rank indicator (RI) indicating the number of layers that can be transmitted by MIMO. In the transmission mode using DMRS, CSI measurement is performed using CRS, CSI-RS or the like. When CSI is measured using CRS, the measured CSI is a combination of CRS' transmitted from a plurality of RUs 103. The signals between RUs 103 having the identical cell ID are not included in interference. Namely, the CSI fed back by the terminal 106 is the CSI in the case of transmission using a plurality of RUs 103 having the identical cell ID. Thus, the CSI in the case of signal transmission using a single RU 103 may differ from the information fed back by the terminal 106. Accordingly, it is necessary to correct or estimate in CU 105 the CSI in the case of the signal transmission from the single RU 103. For example, a method may be contemplated where CU 105 estimates the uplink channel on the basis of an uplink reference signal, and uses that information for downlink CSI. This will be particularly effective in a time division duplex (TDD) system. Alternatively, outer loop link adaptation (OLLA) that corrects CQI in accordance with the ACK information of data may be used. In this case, OLLA may be applied independently (distinguishing the number of times of ACK) between when a plurality of RUs 103 are used and when a single RU 103 is used. Alternatively, OLLA may be applied only when a single RU 103 is used.
When the CSI is measured using CSI-RS, the same CSI-RS may be transmitted from a plurality of RUs 103 having an identical cell ID, as in the case of CRS. In this case, correction of the CSI may be performed by the same method as for CRS. Alternatively, different CSI-RS may be transmitted from each RU 103, as in
CU 201 and RU 203 are connected by a wired line such as an optical fiber line, or a wireless line. RU 203 is also connected to an antenna 202. However, RF function and the antenna 202 may be incorporated into RU 203.
The antenna 202 transmits a downlink radio frequency (RF) signal input from RU 203. The antenna 202 also receives an uplink RF signal transmitted from the terminal. A plurality of antennas may be connected to one RU 203.
RU 203 is provided with an RF function. RU 203 converts a downlink base band IQ signal input from CU 201 into an RF signal which is transmitted via the antenna 202. RU 203 also converts an uplink RF signal input from the antenna 202 into a base band IQ signal which is input to CU 201. RU 203 includes an electric power amplifier. RU 203 is provided with an interface between RU 203 and CU 201. For example, when RU 203 and CU 201 are connected via an optical fiber, RU 203 may include an electrical/optical converter and an optical/electrical converter. RU 203 is further provided with a signal transmission/reception function based on a common public radio interface (CPRI), and may perform signal transmission and reception with CU 201 using a plurality of antennas or a plurality of frequencies.
CU 201 includes a switch 204, a base band unit (BBU) 205, an L2/L3 processor 206, a control unit 207, and a network interface (I/F) 208.
The switch 204 connects BBU 205 and RU 203. The correspondence between BBU 205 and RU 203 is notified by the control unit 207. The connection between BBU 205 and RU 203 may be one-to-one or one-to-many. For example, when each RU 203 has a different cell ID, one RU 203 is connected to one BBU 205. When an identical cell ID is allocated to a plurality of RUs 203, the plurality of RUs 203 are connected to one BBU 205. The connection may include an adjustment of signal power (amplitude) or a weighted average. The details of such connecting operations in the switch may be implemented in the form of a matrix operation illustrated in
BBU 205 includes the function of outputting signals corresponding to a plurality of RUs 203. Each output from BBU 205 may correspond to one signal process device (such as DSP), for example. When the signal input from BBU 205 to the switch 204 is expressed by a vector DDL of 2*number of BBUs rows and one column, the output from the switch 204 (input to RU 203) is expressed by a vector SDL of the number of RUs rows and one column, and the connection in the switch is expressed by a matrix WDL of the number of RUs rows and 2*number of BBUs columns, the relationship between DDL, SDL, and WDL can be expressed by Mathematical Formula 1.
S
DL
=W
DL
D
DL [Mathematical Formula 1]
In the example of
Mathematical Formula 2 indicates that only the first output from each BBU 205 is output to RU 203. Alternatively, when BBU 205 and RU 203 are connected one-to-one, the downlink connection matrix WDL according to Mathematical Formula 3 may be used.
Mathematical Formula 3 indicates that a sum of signals output from BBU 205 is transmitted to RU 203. In this case, each output from BBU 205 is, for example, a layer-by-layer signal or a user-by-user signal.
When an identical cell ID is allocated to RUs 203-1 and 203-2, and RUs 203-1 and 203-2 are connected to BBU 205-1, the downlink connection matrix WDL can be expressed by Mathematical Formula 4.
Mathematical Formula 4 indicates that a second output from BBU 205-1 is output to RU 203-2, as illustrated in
Similarly, in uplink, when the signal input from RU 203 to the switch 204 is expressed by a vector DUL of the number of RUs rows and one column, the output from the switch 204 (input to BBU 205) by a vector SUL of a 2*number of BBUs rows and one column, and the connection in the switch by a matrix WUL of 2*number of BBUs rows and number of RUs columns, the relationship between DUL, SUL, and WUL can be expressed by Mathematical Formula 5.
S
UL
=W
UL
D
UL [Mathematical Formula 5]
In the example of
Alternatively, when BBU 205 and RU 203 are connected one-to-one, the same signal may be input to a plurality of inputs of BBU 205 as according to Mathematical Formula 7.
The connection between BBU 205 and RU 203 in the switch 204 may be realized by another method. For example, for downlink, signals input from BBU 205 to the switch may include information of destination RU 203, and the signals may be sorted in the switch 204. For uplink, signals input from a plurality of RUs 203 may be weighted and summed, and the weighted sum may be output to one BBU 205.
BBU 205 mainly performs a signal process in the physical layer (L1, Layer 1). For example, BBU 205 performs a physical layer signal process of a downlink physical data channel (which may be referred to as physical downlink shared channel (PDSCH)) or a physical control channel (which may be referred to as physical downlink control channel (PDCCH), Enhanced PDCCH, physical hybridARQ indicator channel (PHICH), or physical control format indicator channel (PCFICH)) of each terminal that is input from the L2/L3 processor 206, or generates a physical layer control channel. BBU 205 also performs a physical layer signal process of an uplink data channel (physical uplink shared channel (PUSCH)) and a control channel (physical uplink control channel (PUCCH)) and the like that is input from RU 203 via the switch 204. Specifically, the downlink signal process may include error-correcting coding of a data signal and a control signal, rate matching, modulation, a MIMO signal process such as layer mapping or precoding, mapping to a wireless resource (which may be referred to as a resource element (RE)), or inverse fast Fourier transform (IFFT). BBU 205 also performs generation of reference signals (such as CRS, CSI-RS, and DMRS) for channel estimation for demodulation, CSI measurement, or reception power measurement by the terminals, and insertion of the reference signals in the wireless resource. BBU 205 also performs generation of synchronization signals and a physical layer broadcast channel (physical broadcast channel (PBCH)) and their insertion in RE. As illustrated in
The L2/L3 processor 206 is a processor that performs Layer 2 and Layer 3 processes of the base station. The L2/L3 processor 206 stores respective terminal data transmitted from the core network via the network I/F 208, and control signals received from another base station or a mobility management entity (MME) in a buffer. The L2/L3 processor 206 also performs, e.g., scheduling for determining a terminal for communication or the time and frequency resources allocated to the terminal, HARQ management, packet processing, a wireless line hiding process, and generation of a control signal of an upper layer to a terminal. The L2/L3 processor 206 also determines, based on a measurement report reported from the terminal 106 or uplink reception power information, whether the terminal 106 is positioned at the center of the communication area of each RU 203 or at the boundary of communication areas. The L2/L3 processor 206 also notifies the control unit 207 of information about the terminal positioned near the boundary of communication areas, a measurement result of uplink reception power and the like. Depending on the result of determination of the terminal positioned area, the L2/L3 processor 206 also makes a determination of RU 203 to which the signal from each terminal is transmitted, a transmission mode setting and the like. The L2/L3 processor 206 includes the function of switching the signal process corresponding to a plurality of RUs 203 and a process corresponding to a single RU 203 under the control of the control unit 207.
The control unit 207, based on the uplink reception power information of each terminal notified from the L2/L3 processor 206 or BBU 205, the information of the terminal positioned in the communication area of each RU 203 and the like, detects a set of RUs 203 of which a number of terminals are distributed near the boundary of communication areas. Then, the control unit 207 allocates an identical cell ID to the detected RUs 203, modifies the connection in the switch 204, and notifies connection information to the switch 204. The connection information may also be notified to BBU 205 and the L2/L3 processor 206.
The network I/F 208 provides an interface for connecting CU 201 and the core network through a backhaul line. The network I/F 208 transfers to the core network data and control information of each terminal input from the L2/L3 processor, control information or the like to another base station, or the mobility management entity. The network I/F 208 also transfers data or control information of each terminal and control information and the like for the L2/L3 processor 206, which are input from the core network, to the corresponding L2/L3 processor 206. The network I/F 208 may include the function of managing movements, such as a handover, that takes place in CU 201. Namely, the network I/F may include the function of a local gateway in CU 201, or as a mobility management entity.
The L2/L3 processors #1 and #2 make reception power information measurement and report settings (measurement configuration) in the respective terminals #1 to #3 to determine whether the terminals are at the boundary of the communication areas of RU #1 and RU #2 (S102). The measurement configuration set here is referred to as an event A3, for example. The event is generated when the reception power of an adjacent cell becomes greater than the sum of the reception power of a connected cell (referred to as a “serving cell”) and a predetermined offset value. For example, when the offset value is set at −3 dB, the terminals #1 to #3 start reporting of the reception power of the cell when the difference between the reception power of the connected cell and the reception power of the adjacent cell is 3 dB or less. The report is referred to as a measurement report. The terminal making the measurement report can be determined to be a terminal positioned at the boundary of the communication areas of RU #1 and RU #2. The report may be caused (by setting of On/Off of parameter reportOnLeave) to be made when the cell ceased to satisfy the above condition. The measurement configuration that is set herein may be common with the one set for a handover, and an offset value larger than the handover may be set. In the example of
The control unit, based on the information about the terminals at the communication area boundary reported from each L2/L3 processor, computes the number of the terminals at the communication area boundary of each RU per unit time, and an average number of the terminals at the area boundary (S106). For example, the control unit stores each RU number, the allocated cell ID, and the L2/L3 processor number in association with one another in a RU/cell ID mapping table illustrated in
U
i-j=(1−α)Ui-j+αui-j [Mathematical Formula 8]
wherein α is a forgetting coefficient.
Then, the control unit, based on the computed number of terminals at the communication area boundary, makes a cell ID allocation determination for each RU (S107). A concrete method for the allocation determination will be described later. Herein, it is assumed that the control unit has determined to allocate an identical cell ID to RU #1 and RU #2.
Thereafter, switch connection control is performed from S108 to S114. How the communication area of each RU is changed by the present operation is illustrated in
As a result of the above operation, RU #1 and RU #2 are provided with the identical cell ID. However, BBU #1, immediately after connection modification, is not cognizant of whether each terminal is positioned at the center of the communication area of RU #1, the center of the communication area of RU #2, or at the boundary of the communication areas of RU #1 and RU #2. Thus, immediately after the connection control, transmission is performed to all of the terminals using a plurality of RUs (S115). As to reception, BBU #1 may receive the signals from the plurality of RUs which may be combined at a maximum ratio, simply added up, or averaged, assuming that the number of antennas has been doubled (S116).
However, the determination from S102 to S106 regarding the boundary of the communication area of RU may be implemented by other methods. For example, each terminal measures the position of the terminal using GPS and the like, and notifies the L2/L3 processor of the measured position. When the distance between the terminal and a plurality of RUs is within a certain threshold value, the L2/L3 processor may determine that the terminal is positioned at the boundary of the communication areas of the RUs.
When a set of RUs is referred to as an RU set, the possible number M of RU sets is N (N−1)/2, where N is the number of RUs (S200). The control unit sorts RU sets #1 to #M in order of decreasing number of terminals positioned at the boundary of the communication areas of the RU set (S201). However, in S201, the sorting may be in order of decreasing ratio of the terminals positioned at the boundary of the communication areas. First, a determination is made with respect to the first RU set (S202). Here, the RUs of the i-th RU set #i are assumed to be RU #i1 and RU #i2 (i1<i2) (S203). The control unit checks to see if the cell ID identical to that of another RU (S204) is allocated to RU #i1 or RU #i2. It should be noted, however, that the determination in S204 is whether the cell ID has been allocated in S207 which will be described below, and not whether the identical cell ID is currently actually allocated. If there is an RU in RU #i1 or #i2 to which the identical cell ID is already allocated (Yes), the process proceeds to the next RU set (S209). If not (No), the control unit determines whether the ratio of the area boundary terminals of RU set #i exceeds a predetermined first threshold value to which a first offset is added (S205). The number of terminals at the area boundary can be computed by adding up transposed elements of the non-diagonal components in
The present determination method may also be used when an RU to which an identical cell ID has been allocated is again allocated another cell ID, or when the cell ID identical to that of the other RU is allocated to the RU. The first offset and the second offset are offsets for varying the threshold value for determination depending on whether the identical cell ID has been already allocated to a plurality of RUs. For example, when the particular RU set is already operating as the same cell, the first or second offset may be given a negative value; otherwise, a positive value or 0 may be given. As a result, the RU set already operating as the identical cell ID is unlikely to assume a different cell ID, while the identical cell ID is more likely to be allocated to an RU set that is not operating as such. Alternatively, the opposite offsets may be set.
Only one of S205 and S206 may be implemented. Whether only one of the steps is to be implemented may be controlled by making the first threshold value or the second threshold value zero.
In S205 or S206, other references may be used, or an additional reference may be used. For example, the determination may be made based on the amount of traffic of the terminal's at the area boundary, or a traffic ratio, instead of the number of the terminals at the area boundary. Namely, an identical cell ID may be allocated to the RU when the amount of traffic of the terminals at the area boundary, its ratio, or both exceed certain threshold values. On the other hand, when the amount of traffic of the terminals at the area boundary or its ratio is small, the communication speed (or the modulation scheme and coding rate) of the terminals may be lowered so as to increase the amount of allocated wireless resources, thus addressing the decrease in communication quality. The influence of the increase in the amount of allocated wireless resources on the terminals at the area center is small. Thus, when the amount of traffic of the terminals at the area boundary, or its ratio is small, the necessity of allocating an identical cell ID to a plurality of RUs is low. Accordingly, by performing the cell ID allocation by taking the amount of traffic of the terminals at the area boundary or its ratio into consideration, the influence of cell ID modification on the terminals at the area center can be minimized. It also becomes possible to increase the communication quality in the area where the problem of inter-cell interference is most pronounced, thus decreasing handover. Alternatively, the terminals supporting the CoMP function may not be counted as the terminals at the area boundary in consideration of the fact that the communication quality can be increased by CoMP. While in
For example, the transmission mode is controlled (S307) as follows. As described above, for the terminals positioned at the center of the communication area of RU #1 or RU #2 to which an identical cell ID is allocated (such as terminals #2 and #3 in
Also, with regard to the terminals positioned at the boundary of the communication areas of RU #1 and RU #2, the terminals of which the difference in reception power between RU #1 and RU #2 measured in S304 is not greater than a threshold value A (e.g., 3 dB) have the possibility of a significant decrease in communication quality when transmitting with a single RU. Thus, assuming that a plurality of RUs will be used at all times, a transmission mode using CRS may be set. Meanwhile, for the terminals of which the difference in reception power is greater than the threshold value A but not greater than a threshold value B (e.g., 9 dB), transmission using a plurality of RUs and transmission using a single RU may be switched depending on the situation. Thus, a transmission mode using DMRS may be set. Further, the transmission mode may be controlled depending on the transmission mode support situation notified by the terminal. For example, a terminal not supporting the transmission mode using DMRS may set a transmission mode using CRS, while a terminal supporting the transmission mode using DMRS may set a transmission mode using DMRS.
In another method, the transmission mode may be controlled depending on the mobility situation of the terminal. For example, a terminal with high speed of movement may be set for a transmission mode using CRS, while a terminal with low speed of movement may be set for a transmission mode using DMRS. The terminal with high speed of movement, even if positioned at the center of the communication area of a certain RU, has the high probability of moving to the boundary of the communication area of the RU or to the center of the communication area of a different RU in a short time. Thus, it may become necessary to reconfigure the transmission mode frequently, or the modification of the transmitting RU may not be able to catch up with the movement of the terminal. Accordingly, by setting a transmission mode using CRS for the terminal with high speed of movement and performing transmission using a plurality of RUs, the frequent reconfiguration of the transmission mode or the modifying of the transmitting RU can be avoided. The transmission mode thus controlled is notified from the L2/L3 processor #1 to the respective terminals #1 to #3.
The scheduling (S308) may be performed as follows, for example. First, a metric for scheduling in the case of transmission using a plurality of RUs is computed, and a terminal of which the metric becomes maximum is extracted. The metric in the case where the plurality of RUs are used is computed only for the terminals positioned at the area boundary of RU #1 and RU #2. It is assumed that the terminal extracted herein is u1-2, and the metric for scheduling is metric 1-2. As the metric for scheduling, a proportional fairness (PF) metric may be used, for example. The PF metric is an instantaneous throughput divided by an average throughput. The instantaneous throughput can be computed from the CQI reported by the terminal, or from the CQI estimated or corrected in CU. Similarly, the metric for scheduling in the case where a single RU, i.e., RU #1 or RU #2, is used for communication is computed. The metric in the case where the single RU is used for communication is computed for the terminal of which the reception power of RU #1 or RU #2 becomes maximum. In this case, the terminals of which the reception power of each RU becomes maximum may include only the terminals positioned at the area center of RU #1 or RU #2, and terminals positioned at the area boundary of RU #1 and RU #2. Then, the terminals of which the metric is maximized with respect to each RU are extracted. It is assumed that the extracted terminals are u1 and u2, and the metrics for scheduling are metric 1 and metric 2. When the following Mathematical Formula 9 is satisfied, u1-2 is scheduled.
Metric 1−2>Metric 1+Metric 2 [Mathematical Formula 9]
When the Mathematical Formula 9 is not satisfied, both u1 and u2 are scheduled. u1-2 and either u1 or u2 may be the same terminal. The scheduling using such metrics may be performed on a unit time (Subframe) basis, on a minimum unit wireless resource (Resource Block (RB)) basis, or for each sub-band including a plurality of RBs.
In the same terminal, whether the terminal is the object for transmission using a plurality of RUs or a single RU may be controlled depending on the type of data transmitted. For example, with regard to traffic for control purpose (control plane traffic: C-plane traffic) for which communication stability is important, a plurality of RUs may be used for transmission regardless of whether the terminal is at the area boundary or center. On the other hand, with regard to data traffic for which wireless capacity is important (user-plane traffic: U-plane traffic), the terminal may be the object of transmission using a single RU as long as the terminal is positioned at the center of the communication area of RU. Alternatively, with regard to real-time traffic among the data traffic for which stability is important, such as audio and video, a plurality of RUs may be used for transmission regardless of whether the terminal is at the area boundary or center. Meanwhile, in the case of data traffic, for best effort traffic for which wireless capacity is important, such as for Web browsing, the terminal may be the object for transmission using a single RU as long as the terminal is positioned at the center of the communication area of RU.
The L2/L3 processor #1 and BBU #1, based on the scheduling result in S307 as described above, performs data transmission and reception using various methods. An example will be described with reference to S309 to S312 in
The control unit, based on the reception power of the uplink reference signal of each terminal at each RU that has been notified from the L2/L3 processor #1 and other L2/L3 processors which are not shown in S305, determines whether the terminal is at the boundary of the communication area of each RU, and counts the number of the terminals at the area boundary (S313). For the present operation, an inverse operation to the measurement configuration set in the terminal in S102 may be performed by the control unit. Namely, when the RU where the uplink reference signal reception power is at a maximum is the connected RU, and the other RU is an adjacent RU, if the reception power of the adjacent RU is within a certain offset value from the maximum reception power, the control unit determines that the terminal is positioned near the boundary of the communication areas of the connected RU and the adjacent RU. Otherwise, the control unit determines that the terminal is at the center of the communication area of the connected RU. The control unit performs the present determination on the unit time basis, and, based on the result, counts the number of terminals at the area boundary of the connected RU and the adjacent RU and the number of terminals at the area center per unit time, as in
The measurement of uplink reception power in S303 and S304 may be implemented using other signals. For example, a random access channel that is used when a terminal newly makes an access or performs uplink synchronization may be used.
In the second embodiment, it is contemplated that each RU uses a plurality of frequency carriers.
According to CA, the frequency at which a terminal establishes connection is referred to as a primary cell (PCell), while the frequency used as an additional wireless resource is referred to as a secondary cell (SCell). Information about terminal security, information between a terminal and a mobility management entity (which may be referred to as Non Access Stratum information or NAS) and the like are exchanged using PCell. While modification of PCell requires a handover, modification of SCell can be performed by modifying the wireless resource setting and does not require a handover. Thus, when CA is implemented, the generation of a handover as a result of the movement between RUs having an identical cell ID can be decreased by operating the first frequency as PCell and the second frequency as SCell. For this purpose, the offset value set for each cell or frequency for cell selection may be set such that the cell at the first frequency is more easily connectable than the cell at the second frequency. Further, in this case, in consideration of the ease of handover and the like, the first frequency may be used for PCell while the second frequency may also be used for SCell in RUs 103-3 and 103-4 to which an identical cell ID is not allocated.
In another method for the selective use of the frequency, the frequency may be selected depending on the speed of movement of the terminal. For example, the terminal with high speed of movement is preferentially connected to the first frequency, and the terminal with low speed of movement is preferentially connected to the second frequency. Alternatively, when CA is implemented, the terminal with high speed of movement is preferentially scheduled at the first frequency while the terminal with low speed of movement is preferentially scheduled at the second frequency. As in the case of transmission mode control according to the first embodiment, the terminal with high speed of movement, even if positioned at the center of the communication area of a certain RU, has a high probability of moving to the boundary of the communication area of the RU or to the center of the communication area of a different RU in a short time. Thus, by preferentially connecting the terminal with high speed of movement to the first frequency, the handover as a result of the movement between the RUs can be avoided. Similarly, by preferentially scheduling the terminal with high speed of movement at the first frequency, the problem of the modification of RU (Namely, modification of SCell) failing to catching up with the movement of the terminal can be avoided.
The basic operation of
In S602, a measurement configuration for the measurement and reporting of the reception power of each RU at the second frequency is performed. For the measurement configuration that is set herein, event A6 as defined by LTE may be used. According to event A6, a determination similar to the one for the above-described event A3 is performed for an adjacent cell having the same frequency as SCell and, when a set condition is satisfied, the terminal reports a measurement report (S603). This method may be used when each terminal is using CA. The L2/L3 processor #1 may then determine that the terminal that has reported the measurement report set in S603 is positioned at the boundary of the communication areas of the RU corresponding to SCell and the RU satisfying the condition (S604). Also, the terminal not satisfying the present condition may be determined to be a terminal positioned at the center of the communication area of the RU corresponding to SCell. Meanwhile, the terminal not using or supporting CA may be set to report the reception power of each cell at the second frequency periodically rather than on an event driven basis. Then, in the L2/L3 processor, it is determined whether the condition of event A6 is satisfied. The L2/L3 processor notifies the control unit of the information about the number of the terminals that has been determined by the above method as being at the area boundary, as in S405 of
The switch 404 transfers the input information to the destination BBU 405 designated by each L2/L3 processor 406. Generally, the transmission rate of the information notified from the L2/L3 processor 406 to BBU 405 is lower than the transmission rate of the base band signal output from BBU 405. Thus, by using the present configuration, the required performance of delay due to the process in the switch 404 can be mitigated.
BBU 405 performs a physical layer signal process based on the information notified from the L2/L3 processor 406 via the switch.
Alternatively, the L2/L3 processor 406 may attach a flag to each information of which BBU 405 is notified, indicating whether there is a plurality of destinations. When there is a plurality of the destinations, the switch 404 reproduces the information and transfers it to a plurality of BBUs 405. When the destination is a single BBU 405, the L2/L3 processor 406 may output the information including the destination BBU 405 number to the switch 404, and the information may be sorted in the switch 404 in accordance with the destination.
In the uplink, each BBU 405 performs demodulation and decode processes, and notifies the L2/L3 processor 406 of the result. The L2/L3 processor 406, based on the uplink reception result from each BBU 405, selectively receives only correctly decoded data, for example.
When the present configuration is used, while the switch process can be simplified for the downlink, the processes for maximum ratio combining or interference cancellation in the uplink may become difficult. Thus, the configuration of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2013-194816 | Sep 2013 | JP | national |