A method and system for power coordination for energy efficiency in a wireless communication network.
Future cellular and wireless communication network deployments are envisioned to be deployed in clusters with a large number of macro cells and small cells distributed within a geographical region with overlapping coverage to achieve higher capacity and coverage.
In an example deployment scenario, as illustrated in
In a typical cellular base station, a significant portion of the energy (˜50-80%) is consumed in the power amplification process to reach distant terminals or base station radio units with high path losses. Also, the transmitter circuitry of a base station consumes more power than the receiver circuitry.
Further, power amplification has a rather poor efficiency, defined as the ratio of output power to the input power consumed in the amplification process, typically reaching up to 50 percent for maximum load, but degrading to much lower values in medium and low load situations. This is a major reason why the power consumption in cellular networks is, to a large extent, independent of the traffic load.
In an approximate linear model, the power consumed or spent, Pin, for an output power of Pout can be represented by a linear model as follows:
Pin=A*Pout+B
where A and B are constants that are dependent on the type of power amplifier, e.g., class A, B, C, E etc. Basically, these constants define the power efficiency of the amplifier. From this approximate model, it is clear that even when Pout is reduced to a low value based on the traffic load, the energy savings may not be significant. In particular, at zero output power, a base station still consumes a non-negligible fraction of the maximum input power. The DC power consumption of a typical 3-sector site at zero traffic load is still 50 percent of the peak power.
Poor power efficiency is a major reason why the power consumption in cellular networks is, to a large extent, independent of the traffic load. For this reason, in addition to the application of advanced power amplifiers, new power management concepts are desired. Introducing scalability of hardware components, and supporting them by dynamic power management, may enable the adaptation of energy consumption to actual performance requirements. Further, power savings are facilitated by the deactivation of components in time periods of no operation. With existing power amplifier technology, power savings may be achieved by reducing the power or turning off some of the components in a base station. Normally, this is done by manually configuring specific times in a day to power down or power up specified components in a small cell, but such methods are complex and may lead to unwanted service non-availability and interruptions.
The present embodiments advantageously provide a method and system for adaptively powering down cells within a cluster. According to one aspect, a method includes detecting when a load on a first cell falls below a first predetermined threshold, the load being based at least in part on a number of wireless devices in communication with a first radio unit serving the first cell. Upon detecting when a load on the first cell falls below the first predetermined threshold, the method includes powering down a transmitter of the first radio unit over a period of time to allow time for handoff of wireless devices in the first cell to a second radio unit serving an adjacent cell.
According to this aspect, in some embodiments, the powering down of the transmitter of the first radio unit is performed incrementally over the period of time. The method may further include increasing power of the second radio unit serving the adjacent cell in response to the handoff of the wireless devices from the first cell. In some embodiments, the increasing of power is performed incrementally as the transmitter of the first radio unit is being powered down. In some embodiments, the power increase is performed incrementally according to non-uniform steps. In some embodiments, the power is increased by increasing an average transmit power of at least one of a resource element and a subcarrier. In some embodiments, the method further includes, after powering down the transmitter of the first radio unit, listening by the first radio unit to uplink signals of wireless devices in the first cell. In some embodiments, the listening includes decoding information in the uplink signals. In some embodiments, the decoding is based on an uplink configuration of the adjacent cell. In some embodiments, the uplink signals are carried by at least one of a physical random access channel, synchronization reference signals and a physical uplink shared channel.
In some embodiments the method further includes detecting when a demand for resources of the first radio unit exceeds a second predetermined threshold, the demand for resources being based at least in part on a number of wireless devices transmitting uplink signals to the first radio unit; and upon detecting when a demand for resources of the first radio unit exceeds the second predetermined threshold, powering up the transmitter of the first radio unit. In some embodiments, the powering up of the transmitter of the first radio unit includes incrementally increasing the power at which reference symbols are transmitted by the first radio unit. In some embodiments, the method further includes detecting when a load on a third cell falls below a second predetermined threshold; and upon detecting when a load on the third cell falls below the second predetermined threshold, powering down a transmitter of a third radio unit serving the third cell over a period of time to allow time for handoff of wireless devices in the third cell to the second radio unit serving the adjacent cell. In some embodiments, the method further includes continuing reception of uplink signals from the wireless devices in the third cell by the third radio unit after powering down of the transmitter of the third radio unit. In some embodiments, the method further includes receiving information in the uplink signals from the wireless devices in the first and third cells at the adjacent cell to facilitate coordinated multipoint, CoMP, assistance.
According to another aspect, some embodiments include a control unit configured to control power consumption of at least one radio unit serving a cell. The control unit includes processing circuitry. The processing circuitry is configured to: obtain cell loading information from a plurality of radio units serving a plurality of cells; determine a first radio unit from the plurality of radio units having a lowest resource usage; and instruct the first radio unit having the lowest resource usage from the plurality of radio units to power down a transmitter of the first radio unit over a period of time to enable handoff of wireless devices in a first cell served by the first radio unit to a second cell served by a second radio unit.
According to this aspect, in some embodiments, the powering down of the transmitter of the first radio unit is performed incrementally over the period of time. In some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to send an instruction to the second radio unit serving the second cell to increase transmit power in response to the handoff of the wireless device from the first cell. In some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to increase the transmit power of the second radio unit incrementally as the first radio unit is powered down. In some embodiments, the power increase is performed incrementally according to non-uniform steps. In some embodiments, the power is increased by increasing an average transmit power of at least one of a resource element and a subcarrier. In some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to instruct the first radio unit to listen to uplink signals of wireless devices in the first cell. In some embodiments, the listening includes decoding information in the uplink signals. In some embodiments, the decoding is based on an uplink configuration of the adjacent cell. In some embodiments, the uplink signals are carried by at least one of a physical random access channel, synchronization reference signals and a physical uplink shared channel. In some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to: detect when a demand for resources of the first radio unit exceeds a second predetermined threshold, the demand for resources being based at least in part on a number of wireless devices transmitting uplink signals to the first radio unit; and upon detecting when a demand for resources of the first radio unit exceeds the second predetermined threshold, power up the transmitter of the first radio unit. In some embodiments, the powering up of the transmitter of the first radio unit includes incrementally increasing the power at which reference symbols are transmitted by the first radio unit. In some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to: detect when a load on a third cell falls below a second predetermined threshold; and upon detecting when a load on the third cell falls below the second predetermined threshold, power down a transmitter of a third radio unit serving the third cell over a period of time to allow time for handoff of wireless devices in the third cell to the second radio unit serving the second cell. In some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to cause continued reception of uplink signals from the wireless devices in the third cell by the third radio unit after powering down of the transmitter of the third radio unit. In some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to cause reception of information in the uplink signals from the wireless devices in the first and third cells at the second cell to facilitate coordinated multipoint, CoMP, assistance.
According to yet another aspect, some embodiments include a first radio unit serving a first cell adjacent to a second cell served by a second radio unit. The first radio unit includes a transmitter and processing circuitry, the processing circuitry configured to: receive an instruction to power down the transmitter; and power down the transmitter over a period of time to cause handoff of wireless devices in the first cell.
According to this aspect, in some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to power down the transmitter incrementally over the period of time. In some embodiments, the processing circuitry is further configured to: receive an instruction to power up the transmitter; and power up the transmitter. In some embodiments, powering up the transmitter includes incrementally increasing the power at which reference symbols are transmitted.
According to another aspect, embodiments include a control unit configured to control power consumption of at least one radio unit serving a cell. The control unit includes a resource monitoring module configured to obtain cell loading information from a plurality of radio units serving a plurality of cells and to determine a first radio unit from the plurality of radio units having a lowest resource usage. The control unit further includes a power control module configured to instruct the first radio unit having the lowest resource usage from the plurality of radio units to power down a transmitter of the first radio unit over a period of time to cause handoff of wireless devices in a first cell served by the first radio unit to second cell served by a second radio unit.
According to this aspect, in some embodiments, the power control module is further configured to instruct the second radio unit serving the second cell to increase transmit power. In some embodiments, the instruction to increase power instructs the second radio unit to increase transmit power gradually as the transmit power of the first radio unit decreases.
A more complete understanding of the embodiments described herein, and the attendant advantages and features thereof, will be more readily understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
Before describing in detail exemplary embodiments that are in accordance with the present disclosure, it is noted that the embodiments reside primarily in combinations of apparatus components and processing steps related to conservation of power in a cell cluster. Accordingly, the system and method components have been represented where appropriate by conventional symbols in the drawings, showing only those specific details that are pertinent to understanding the embodiments of the present disclosure so as not to obscure the disclosure with details that will be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of the description herein.
As used herein, relational terms, such as “first” and “second,” “top” and “bottom,” and the like, may be used solely to distinguish one entity or element from another entity or element without necessarily requiring or implying any physical or logical relationship or order between such entities or elements. Further, the term wireless device may include a user equipment (UE), mobile phone, laptop computer, iPad, or other mobile device capable of wireless communication.
Based on use of a first cell's resources, the transmitter of the first cell's radio unit (RU) may be completely turned off by reducing the transmit power over a period of time, for example incrementally, and handing off wireless devices attached to the first cell to a nearby cell. Optionally, transmit power of the nearby cell's radio unit may be turned up to better reach the wireless devices attached to the first cell. The receiver of the first cell's radio unit continues listening to the uplink (UL) transmission, i.e., transmission from wireless device to cell radio unit, from the wireless devices of the first cell. The radio unit of the nearby cell may instruct a wireless device of the first cell to adjust its UL transmit power to conserve the wireless device's battery.
According to methods described herein, cells in a dense heterogeneous deployment can be partially turned off or turned on with minimal coordination among the cells. Transmitters of the cells may be turned off completely to obtain the maximum energy savings. The receivers of the “inactive” cells—those cells whose radio transmitters have been stepped down in power—can still assist to improve the UL coverage and capacity, e.g., by providing coordinated multipoint (CoMP) assistance. Further, when there is a need to support excessive incoming traffic, the inactive cells can turn on their transmitter automatically by detecting the UL signals transmitted by the incoming wireless devices.
As mentioned above, small cells are typically deployed within a coverage area to increase system capacity. In such cases, coverage of different cells can overlap. When a base station does not need extra capacity, the small cells may not be used for extra coverage or capacity. In such situations the lightly loaded cells may be turned off. A cluster of cells can be deployed as follows. When the system load of a small cell is detected to be low for extended duration, the transmitter part of the small cell can be turned off by stepping down its transmit power, which causes all of the wireless devices associated with the small cell to perform a handover (HO) to one of the nearby cells, or to the base station of the macro cell. Thus, although the small cell's transmitter is being powered down, the wireless devices associated with the small cell do not have their calls or communication sessions dropped. Rather, graceful HO is accomplished.
The radio unit serving a small cell may turn off its transmit power amplifier completely in steps over a time. The target radio unit serving the macro cell or small cells other than the small cell whose transmitter is being powered down may optionally increase their transmitter transmit power in steps up to a maximum limit.
The power ramp up or ramp down steps, ΔP_U and ΔP_D are decided based on the capabilities of the power amplifiers. There may be delay between the instants of power up and power down, as illustrated by i in
In some embodiments, the small cell whose transmitter is being powered down does not turn off its receiver, but instead, keeps listening to the UL specific transmissions from the wireless devices even after the wireless devices are successfully handed over to the surrounding cells. Received signal quality metrics are collected from each cell by the base stations and are used to turn on the transmitter of the powered down cell if additional capacity is needed.
When the demand for radio resources at a cell exceeds a threshold, the base station or a network entity coordinating the cluster of cells may search for cells whose transmitters are turned off and essentially operating in the assist mode, i.e., receive-only mode. From uplink signals received from the radio units of the neighbor cells in the assist mode, appropriate cells are selected to turn on their transmitters to alleviate the load at the serving cell. One selection criterion to select an appropriate neighboring cell in assist mode is to count the number of serving cell's wireless devices the neighbor cell can listen to with acceptable receive quality. The receive quality can be assessed by decoding the uplink signals that are received from the radio units of the neighbor cell in assist mode. When the count of serving cell's wireless devices that can be supported by the neighbor cell, which is the measure of load at the neighbor cell, exceeds a predetermined threshold, the neighbor cell's transmitter may be turned on.
In some embodiments, the receivers of the radio units 22 whose transmitters are powered down may continue to operate continuously at full power or, in the alternative, are configured to operate in a sniffing mode only using very low power just to detect wireless device transmissions in the cell. In some embodiments, the radio units 22 operate in an asymmetric mode where a wireless device in a first cell served by a radio unit 22a whose transmitter has been turned off is listened to by the radio unit 22a, whereas the wireless device receives downlink transmissions from the fully active radio unit 22c. In this way, the wireless device may conserve power by not having to ramp up its uplink transmit power to reach the active radio unit 22c, since the first radio unit 22a is probably closer. In this case, only the downlink transmission is received from the cell of radio unit 22c. The uplink transmission from the wireless device is received by radio unit 22a and subsequently decoded at the cell of radio unit 22c. In another option, the uplink transmission from the wireless device is received by radio unit 22a and radio unit 22c and subsequently both the received signals are decoded in combination at the cell of radio unit 22c.
In the diagram of
Transmit power adjustment is explained as follows. Transmit power, Pt0, of the wireless device 32, before HO may be expressed as:
P
t0
=P
rCell0+αcell0Lcell0
where PrCell0 is the target received power per physical resource block (PRB) at the antenna port of cell 1-1 (RU 22a), also referred to herein as cell 0. LCell0 is the path loss between the wireless device 32 and cell 0. The term αCell0 is a scaling factor in the range [0,1], set by the radio unit 22a serving cell 0 as a fractional power control parameter.
Transmit power Pt1 of the wireless device 32, after HO may be expressed as:
P
t1
=P
rCell1+αcell1Lcell1+Δ
where:
Δ=PrCell1+αcell1Lcell1−min(PrCell1+αcell1Lcell1, PrCell0+αcell0Lcell0)
and where αcelli is the fractional power control parameter for cell i, e.g., cell 1-2 (RU 22c). PrCell1 is the target receive power at cell 1. The value of Δ can be computed at cell 1-0 with the knowledge of the average received power at cell 1-0 and also the fractional power control parameter at cell 1-0. Of note, the integers corresponding to i in the above equations refers to cell “1-i” in
In accordance with some embodiments, the cells can be coordinated to determine which cells should have their transmitters powered down. An example of downlink power coordination among cells when turning off the transmitter of a cell is explained as follows. When the radio resource usage for user data transmission in cell l is below a threshold for an extended time, a metric is computed for the other active cells to evaluate the possibility of turning off cell l, as follows. For all wireless devices actively communicating with cell l, an expected downlink (DL) signal to interference plus noise ratio (SINR) is computed if they were connected to one of the best cells within the cluster:
where PT(i) is the average transmit power of PDSCH RE or PRB of the cell −i; Lj(i) is the path loss from the cell i to the wireless device j; and η represents the power estimate of noise and other interference per resource element (RE) or PRB.
Lj(i), the path loss of wireless device j with respect to cell i, for example, can be computed by the network by obtaining the reference signal receive power (RSRP) reported from the wireless device j:
L
j(i)=PT(i)−RSRPj(i)
where RSRPj(i) is the RSRP from wireless device j with respect to cell i. The estimated SINRs of the wireless devices communicating with a cell can be recomputed based on the specific transmit power level of the wireless device, keeping the average power level less than or equal to PT(i).
Similarly, the expected DL SINR improvement of the wireless devices actively communicating with the cells i, ,i=0,1, . . . , N_cell-1; i≠l are also computed. Of note, the integers corresponding to i in the above equations refers to cell “1-i”, and the integers corresponding to l refer to cell “1-l” in
DL power coordination for selective activation of a transmitter of a cell for data offloading is explained as follows. When the radio resource usage for user data transmission in cell l is above a threshold for an extended time, a metric is computed for the other inactive cells to evaluate the possibility of turning on these inactive cells to offload the data traffic from cell l, as follows. For all the wireless devices actively communicating with cell l, the expected DL SINR is computed if they were connected to one of the best inactive cells within the cluster:
where PT(i) is the average transmit power of the physical downlink shared channel (PDSCH) RE or PRB of the cell I; Lj(i) is the path loss from the cell i to the wireless device j; and η represents the power estimate of noise and other interference per RE or PRB. In another embodiment, the best cell is the cell that can support the maximum number of a serving cell's wireless devices with acceptable signal quality. By turning on this one best cell, many UEs can be offloaded, i.e., to conserve the network energy power, so that a minimum number of cells are operating for a given system load.
Lj(i), the path loss of wireless device j with respect to cell i, for example, can be computed by the network by obtaining the average received power from the wireless device j measured at the inactive cell I, PR(i):
L
j(i)=PTj−PR(i)
where PTj is the average receive power from wireless device j at cell i.
Similarly, the expected DL SINR degradation of the wireless devices actively communicating with the cell l, are also computed. The SINR degradation is due to the increase in interference level with the expected turning on of the transmitters of the inactive cells (the dominant interference is due to the DL reference symbols transmitted by cells). When some of the wireless devices in cell l can find a new network node with acceptable performance and when network nodes have enough resources to support the remaining wireless devices with the estimated SINR, the transmitters of the selected inactive cells are turned on. When turning on the transmitter, the system bandwidth may be decided based on the number of radio resources that are required to support the data offloading. In other words, partial system bandwidth can be turned on.
When the demand for radio resources is increased at the cells which are active, the transmitters of the inactive cells—which are the cells, whose transmitters are powered down—are instructed to be turned on. In some embodiments, where the receivers of the inactive cells detect increased activity in their respective coverage areas, the inactive cells may decide to turn on their transmitters, thereby becoming active cells. The increased activity can be detected by monitoring the UL specific reference transmissions such as, the random access channel (RACH), sounding reference signal (SRS) or physical uplink control channel (PUCCH) from the wireless devices which are connected to the neighboring active cells.
Alternatively, when the UL receive power from most of wireless devices is significantly greater at an inactive cell compared to the surrounding active cells, the control unit may decide to turn on the inactive cell. The control unit may further decide to turn off the transmitters of some of the active neighboring cells. When there are many wireless devices which are in the radio resource control (RRC) IDLE state transitioning to the RRC connected state, there will be RRC connected establishment procedures, including the transmission of the RACH. The inactive cells can detect the RACHs transmitted by these wireless devices and may decide to turn on their transmitters. The RACH configuration parameters are exchanged among the active cells and the inactive cells should be able to monitor the RACH resources configured by their active neighbor cells.
The control unit 34 includes processing circuitry 36 which may be application specific integrated circuitry (ASIC) or may be a processor 38 and memory 40, where the processor 38 operates according to executable instructions 42 stored in the memory 40. The processing circuitry 36 may be configured to obtain cell load information via a cell load information collector 44 from each of a plurality of radio units serving a plurality of cells in a cell cluster 30. Based on the cell load information, which may include physical resource blocks (PRBs) allocated by a radio unit serving a cell to wireless devices in the cell, the processing circuitry 36 may be configured to determine via a lowest resource usage detector 46 a first radio unit from the plurality of radio units having a lowest resource usage. A power control unit 48 of the processing circuitry 36 may instruct the first radio unit having the lowest resource usage from the plurality of radio units to power down a transmitter of the first radio unit over a period of time to cause handoff of wireless devices in a first cell served by the first radio unit 22a to a second cell served by a second radio unit 22c.
One reason for powering down over a period of time is to facilitate a smooth handoff without dropped calls. Thus, in some embodiments, the transmitter of the radio unit is powered down incrementally over the period of time according to steps 20 as shown in
Optionally, the processing circuitry 36 may generate an instruction to one or more nearby radio units, such as radio unit 22c to increase downlink power in response to the handoff of the wireless device from the first cell to the second cell. The power of the second radio unit may be increased incrementally according to steps 18 as shown in
When a demand for resources of the first radio unit 22a exceeds a second predetermined threshold, the power control unit 48 of the control unit 34 issues an instruction to the first radio unit 22a causing the first radio unit 22a to power up its transmitter. The transmitter of the first radio unit 22a may power up incrementally. In particular, the power at which reference symbols are transmitted by the first radio unit 22a may be increased incrementally.
Note that the transmitters of more than one radio unit 22 may be powered down at a time. Thus, when a load on a third radio base station 22b falls below a third predetermined threshold, the transmitter of the third radio base station 22b may be powered down over a period of time by the control unit 34 to allow time for handoff of wireless devices in the cell served by the third radio base station 22b to a nearby cell such as the second cell. The third radio base station 22b may be instructed by the power control unit 48 to listen to the uplink signals of the wireless devices in the third cell served by the third radio base station 22b.
The control unit 34 may combine uplink signals received from the first, second and third radio units 22a-c coherently in a coordinated multipoint (CoMP) process to obtain a macro diversity advantage at the first radio unit 22a and/or the third radio unit 22b. The control unit 34 may also instruct a radio unit receiver to operate in a “sniffing” mode to monitor for UL traffic without putting the receiver into a fully operational mode.
Thus, in some embodiments, cell circuitry of underutilized cells in a cluster can be operated at lower power or turned off to save the power consumption of the network and further reduce the unnecessary interference caused by the transmission of various reference signals from these under-utilized cells. Thus, methods include adaptively turning off and turning on the cells within a cluster to improve the network efficiency and battery power saving at the connected wireless devices.
Embodiments can be realized in hardware, or a combination of hardware and software. Any kind of computing system, or other apparatus adapted for carrying out the methods described herein, is suited to perform the functions described herein. A typical combination of hardware and software could be a specialized computer system, having one or more processing elements and a computer program stored on a storage medium that, when loaded and executed, controls the computer system such that it carries out the methods described herein. The arrangements described herein can also be embedded in a computer program product, which comprises all the features enabling the implementation of the methods described herein, and which, when loaded in a computing system is able to carry out these methods. Storage medium refers to any volatile or non-volatile storage device.
Computer program or application in the present context means any expression, in any language, code or notation, of a set of instructions intended to cause a system having an information processing capability to perform a particular function either directly or after either or both of the following a) conversion to another language, code or notation; b) reproduction in a different material form.
It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that embodiments are not limited to what has been particularly shown and described herein above. In addition, unless mention was made above to the contrary, it should be noted that all of the accompanying drawings are not to scale. A variety of modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings without departing from the scope of the disclosure, which is limited only by the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2015/055564 | 7/22/2015 | WO | 00 |