The present disclosure relates to device-to-device (D2D) communication and in particular to interference management for multiuser in-coverage D2D communications.
Device-to-device (D2D) communication has been developed to meet growing capacity demands due to rapid growth of wireless data services. In a D2D communication scenario, two user equipment (UEs) devices directly communicate with each other without having the payload traversed through the backhaul network. D2D communication is a promising feature that can potentially scale the capacity of the network, improve network resource utilization, such as network throughput, spectrum utilization, reduce transmission delays and offload traffic from the network nodes, as well as improve coverage for user terminals (UE's) that do not have network coverage.
The performance and advantages of D2D communication is currently an active topic of investigation in 3GPP (3rd Generation Partnership Program) RAN (Radio Access Network) forums, for use e.g. in wireless communications technologies such as those governed by 3GPP (LTE (Long Term Evolution) and LTE-Advanced (LTE-A) standards.
The D2D communication may be bi-directional, where both user terminals receive and transmit using the same or different resources. D2D communication may also be used in a scenario where one of the user terminals transmits and the other one receives the signals. Still further, D2D communication may be used in a point-to-multipoint scenario, such as for example multicast, or broadcast communications, when a plurality of devices receive signals from the same transmitting device. This scenario is particularly useful for emergency services or public safety operation to spread vital information to several devices in an affected area. Still further, D2D communications may be used also for local social networks, content sharing, advertising, and various mobile-to-mobile applications.
In some wireless systems, the D2D UEs operate under the supervision of a radio access network, referred to as cellular network assisted D2D communications. In this case, UEs in the vicinity of each other can establish a direct radio link, i.e. a D2D direct bearer. This direct radio link is referred to as ‘network (NW) link’ or a ‘D2D-NW link’. The D2D-NW link is used for example for resource assignment for D2D communication, maintenance of radio link quality of D2D communication link, etc. While UEs communicate over the D2D-NW link, they also maintain a cellular connection with their respective serving eNB. Furthermore, in some scenarios, D2D UEs may operate to establish direct communication without the intervention of the network infrastructure.
The specification uses the term ‘network node’ for any kind of network equipment including but not limited to eNodeB's (eNB), Node B's (NB), base stations (BS), wireless access points (AP), base station controllers (BSC), radio network controllers (RNC), relay, donor node controlling relays, base transceiver stations (BTS), transmission points, transmission nodes, remote radio units (RRU), remote radio heads (RRH), nodes in distributed antenna system (DAS), core network nodes, mobility management entities (MME), etc.
The term ‘D2D capable UE’ or ‘D2D wireless UE’ or D2D wireless device’ is used in this specification for any type of wireless device, which is capable of at least D2D communication through a wireless link. In some embodiments, the UE may be a mobile communication device, a subscriber station, or another device that is configured to communicate with a wireless systems in conformance with an appropriate protocol. Examples of such D2D wireless devices could be sensors, modems, smart phones, machine type (MTC) devices, PDAs, iPADs, tablets, laptop embedded equipment (LEE), laptop mounted equipment (LME), USB dongles, etc.
The D2D devices that communicate with each-other are called in some instance a ‘D2D pair’, and the communication between the D2D wireless devices of the pair is referred to as ‘D2D communication’, which takes place along a ‘D2D link’.
The specification also uses the term ‘wireless access network (WAN) UE’, or ‘WAN device’ to a device that is capable to UL and DL communication with a network node. Example of these devices are, as for the D2D devices, smart phones, MCT devices, PDAs, iPADs, tablets, LEE, LME, USB dongles, sensors, modems, etc. The term ‘candidate WAN UE’ or ‘candidate WAN device’ is used for a WAN device that is considered by the network node as a candidate to share the transmission resources with a D2D pair. The communication between the WAN devices and the network node is referred to as ‘WAN communication’ which takes place along a ‘WAN link’.
Although terminology from 3GPP LTE (or E-UTRAN) is used herein, this should not be seen as limiting the embodiments described here to LTE systems only. Other wireless systems, including WCDMA, UTRA FDD, UTRA TDD, and GSM/GERAN/EDGE and other current and future technologies, may also benefit from exploiting the ideas covered within this disclosure. Furthermore, this description may apply to scenarios in which network nodes employ differing radio access technologies (RATs). In some embodiments, short-range technologies, such as Bluetooth or Wi-Fi may be used. In other embodiments, D2D operation may reuse licensed LTE spectrum or unlicensed LTE spectrum. D2D communication may be non-transparent to the wireless system and may occur on a cellular spectrum (i.e. in-band), or unlicensed spectrum (i.e. out-band).
The embodiments described refer to D2D wireless devices are applicable to single carrier or multi-carrier or carrier aggregation based D2D communication.
As well, in the context of this specification, the term ‘downlink’ (DL) is used for the transmission from a network node to a user device, and the term ‘uplink’ (UL) is used for the transmission from a user device to a network node.
In order to mitigate the interference between D2D UEs and WAN UEs, according to the current procedures, the network must allocate dedicated resources in time and/or frequency for D2D communication. Therefore, the WAN UE is deprived of those resources, thus reducing the spectral efficiency.
Accordingly, embodiments presented herein aim to provide a way of improving the spectral efficiency associated with D2D communication.
There is also a need to provide methods and apparatuses that enable a D2D wireless device to more efficiently continue the D2D communication regardless of the type of coverage in which the D2D communication takes place. The D2D transmissions and D2D wireless devices should not cause unnecessary or additional degradation to the other UEs and/or network nodes when operating in partial coverage or out-of-coverage scenarios.
In addition, there is a need to enable the D2D wireless devices to continue their operation in public safety situations, when for example network nodes are unavailable or partially available. Furthermore, a solution where a network node does not have to always maintain a communication link with D2D UEs for the D2D operation to continue. The network node may have resource constraints due to lack of resources, heavy load or a disastrous situation.
The need for frequent communication between nearby devices has increased lately with the capability of smart devices for content share, gaming, social networking, etc. whereas the conventional UL/DL transmission mode in a cellular network fails to address this demand efficiently. Therefore, there is a need to enable the network to reuse the spectrum for the D2D communication, thus enhancing the spectral efficiency.
The present disclosure provides embodiments which can be implemented in a network node and/or a D2D capable UE to address some of the above needs. The network node herein can be a serving network node of the D2D UE or any network node with which the D2D UE can establish or maintain a communication link and/or receive information (e.g. via a broadcast channel).
In particular, to address some of the above identified needs, in one embodiment a method of interference management of multiuser in-coverage device-to-device communications at a network node is provided. A WAN signal from a WAN device is received, the WAN signal being mixed with an interferer signal caused by a D2D communication between a transmitting D2D device and a receiving D2D device of a D2D pair. An attribute value difference between a first attribute value of the WAN signal and a second attribute value of the interferer signal is determined. If the attribute value difference does not meet a target difference, a transmission parameter of at least one of the WAN device and the transmitting D2D wireless device is controlled to adjust the difference to meet the target difference.
Further embodiments are also provided. According to some embodiments, network nodes, computer programs, computer program products are also provided.
The accompanying drawing figures incorporated in and forming a part of this specification illustrate several aspects of the disclosure, and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the disclosure.
The embodiments set forth below represent information to enable those skilled in the art to practice the embodiments and illustrate the best mode. A number of exemplary embodiments will be presented. It should be noted that these embodiments are not mutually exclusive. Components from one embodiment may be tacitly assumed to be present in another embodiment and it will be obvious to a person skilled in the art how those components may be used in the other exemplary embodiments.
An example of an in-coverage scenario is shown in
An example of partial coverage scenario is shown in
An example of an out-of-coverage scenario is shown in
The current standardization of D2D in LTE Release 12 defines two basic types of D2D communication for in-coverage D2D uses scenario shown in
In the in-coverage embodiment (see
In Type 1 D2D communication, as shown at 101 on
On receipt of an uplink grant from the network node 20, shown at 102, UE 10 uses this UL grant to transmit to network node 20 a request for D2D transmission resources (i.e. resources for Proximity Services or ProSe communication), as shown at 103. For example, this can be a message similar to the BSR (Buffer Status Report) in legacy LTE procedures.
In response to the request, the network node 20 allocates further resources to the D2D UE pair for the D2D communication and D2D UE 10 receives from the network node 20 this allocation, as shown by the D2D grant message, in step 104.
At step 105, D2D communication between UE 10 and UE 15 takes place, using the D2D transmission resources allocated by the network node 20 in step 104 for D2D Type 1 Transmit In-Coverage.
For Type 2 D2D communication, the network node 20 broadcasts information about a pool of resources that may be shared by the UEs that attempt to establish D2D communication. The resource pools may be provided via system information broadcast (SIB) messaging. In this case, the transmitting UE 10 selects the transmission resources for D2D communication from the resource pool, as shown at 106. The resource selection by UE 10 may be in contention with other D2D UEs in the network. If successful in securing the selected resources, the pair of D2D wireless devices, 10 and 15, will use the selected resources for the D2D communication, as shown at 107.
Typically, for Type 1 D2D communication, the network node 20 controls the D2D transmit power in conjunction with assigning the scheduled PRBs. D2D UEs involved in Type 2 D2D operation transmit at, or close to full power, in order to maximize their potential coverage area, particularly in the first stages of the establishment of a D2D connection. However, for both Type 1 and Type 2 D2D communications, the transmit power in many scenarios does not have to be at, or close to the maximum transmit power of the D2D device for establishment of a successful D2D communication, particularly if the two D2D devices are in close proximity. Therefore, opportunities occur for the UEs involved in the D2D transmission to operate at reduced powers, enabling reuse of the PRBs employed by a first D2D transmission, by a second D2D transmission or by a WAN UE transmission.
Accordingly, some embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to enabling the network to reuse the spectrum used by the D2D communication, thus enhancing the spectral efficiency.
In particular, some embodiments described herein are provided for enabling co-channel transmission of one or more D2D pairs using the same transmission resources as the transmission resources used by one or more WAN UEs. This mode of operation is also referred herein as ‘overlay’. To enable the ‘overlay’ mode of operation, some embodiments described herein provide interference management of multiuser in-coverage device-to-device communications.
Some proposed embodiments enable a D2D UE to more efficiently continue the D2D communication regardless of the type of coverage in which the D2D communication takes place
In the following, the network node is referred to as an eNB, the D2D wireless devices 10 and 15 are referred to as D2D wireless devices or D2D UE's and the user device 25, not involved in D2D communications but sharing the transmission resources with the D2D pair is referred to as a WAN device 25 or WAN UE. Also, the transmission resources used by the WAN UEs and D2D UEs are alternatively referred to as PRBs (Physical Resource Blocks). It is also to be mentioned that in LTE, the D2D transmissions employ the uplink FDD channel by default so the embodiments described herein refer to uplink communication. However, it is noted that the same principles of interference management may be used for downlink transmissions.
With respect to
An overlay scenario is when the D2D pair uses the same transmission resources as those used by the user device 25. Scheduled D2D operation takes place when the D2D pair receives from the network node 20 a specific grant to transmit. The grant message received from the network node 20 indicates the physical resource block(s) (PRB(s)) that the D2D pair can use for D2D transmission. That is, the time and the frequency resources are indicated in the grant message. Contention based D2D takes place when the D2D pair does not receive a specific grant from the network node for transmission, rather physical resources are allocated to a group of D2D UEs that use those PRBs on a contention basis.
In the scenario shown in
In
In the embodiment of
In step 204, the (attribute value) difference is compared with a target difference, Threshold1. The target difference is chosen to enable (or at least enhance the ability to perform) interference management, including performing an interference cancellation process, to separate the interferer signal from the desired signal. The value of Threshold1 could be for example predetermined, set by the network, or calculated using a function of one or more of the received power of WAN, received power of D2D, CQI or other parameters. Other ways of determining the Threshold1 may be established, taking into account the network configuration and operational parameters. When the attribute is measured received power, the attribute value difference is also denoted herein as Δpower.
At step 208, the network node 20 allocates resources to the D2D transmission and to the WAN UE, if the target difference is met, as shown by branch YES of the flowchart. If the target difference is not met, shown by branch NO of decision block 204 in
For example, in the case that Δpower between the D2D transmission and the transmission from the WAN UE is less than the Threshold1 value, the network node 20 may perform a power adjustment of the transmission powers of the WAN UE 25 and/or the transmitting D2D UE 10. If the received power of the WAN signal 40 at the eNB 20 is higher than the received power of the interferer signal 42 caused by the D2D communication, the eNB 20 may power control down the D2D transmitting UE 10 and/or power control up the WAN UE 25 (within allowed transmission power limits) to achieve the target power difference. If signal 40 has a lower received power at the eNB 20 than that of the interferer signal 42, the eNB 20 may choose to power control down the WAN UE 25 and/or power control up the transmitting D2D UE 10 (within allowed transmission power limits) order to achieve the target power difference. The power control information may be transmitted from the eNB 20 in various ways, such as in the D2D grant message or as part of a D2D power control message.
The power mismatch between the received powers (or other attribute values) can be exploited in the eNB 20, by having an eNB receiver implement interference management such as an interference cancellation process, as shown in step 210. Once a WAN UE is selected for transmission using the same resources as the D2D pair, upon reception of a WAN UE signal and the interfering D2D signal, the eNB 20 detects the stronger signal, and interference-cancels it from the composite signal to detect the weaker signal, if necessary. Successive interference cancellation (SIC), parallel interference cancellation (PIC) and interference rejection combining (IRC) are some examples of interference cancellation techniques that may be applied. For the case of one WAN transmission and one D2D transmission as in FIG. 4, eNB 20 can first detect the stronger of the D2D interferer or WAN signal 40 or 42 in the composite received signal, remove it from the composite received signal using interference cancelation methods and then detect the weaker signal.
If the stronger signal received at eNB 20 is signal 40 from the WAN UE 25, no interference cancellation may be necessary, e.g. if an SINR (Signal to Noise Ratio) target can be met by the initial detection. If the WAN UE signal 40 is the weaker signal, interference cancellation may be employed to remove the D2D interferer signal 42, followed by detection of the desired WAN UE signal 40. A similar approach may be used at the receiving D2D UE 15, where interference management and, possibly interference cancellation, may be employed to remove the WAN interferer signal 43 caused by the WAN transmission, to subsequently detect the desired D2D transmission. The ability to perform interference management and, if necessary, interference cancellation, in such cases, may depend on meeting target differences between attributes of the desired signal and of the interferer signal, such as noted above.
A plurality of candidate WAN UE's, referred herein also as WAN UE; (where i represents an integer index value, i=1 to N, N total number of candidate WAN UEs), may be considered for sharing transmission resources with a given D2D pair of UE's 10 and 15. In this case, the method according to the flowchart in
Similarly, there may be more than one transmitting D2D device interfering with a given WAN UE. In such a case, the eNB 20 may determine a third attribute value difference between the first attribute value of a WAN signal and a further second attribute value of a second interferer signal mixed with the WAN signal by the second transmitting D2D wireless device. If the third attribute value difference meets the target difference, the eNB 20 may additionally allocate the shared transmission resource to the second transmitting D2D wireless devices for D2D communication.
Furthermore, if more WAN UE's all use the same transmission resources, the eNB 20 may need to interference manage the transmission between individual WAN UE transmissions as well. According to one embodiment, this may be achieved by adjusting the power level of a WAN UE; above all the power level of all other UEs (D2D UE and WAN UE's considered so far), at each iteration, by an amount required to meet a target difference. For example, for two WAN UEs, WAN UE1 and WAN UE2, and one transmitting D2D UE, the following can be performed: (a) adjusting the transmitter power for WAN UE1 above the transmitter power for WANUE2 and above the transmitter power for the transmitting D2D UE, so as to meet a respective target difference in both cases, to detect and cancel the signal from WAN UE1; (b) adjusting the transmitter power for WAN UE2 above the transmitter power for the transmitting D2D UE to detect and cancel the signal from WAN UE2; (c) if needed, detecting the signal from D2D UE.
In another embodiment, the network node 20 measures (as per step 200), the attribute value for each one of a plurality of candidates WAN UE's and generates, for example, an ordered list 72 of the attribute value of the signals received from each candidate WAN UE's. Using the list 72, the eNB 20 determines the differences between the attribute values for the received interferer signal 42, caused by the D2D transmission, and signal 40 received from each candidate WAN UEs. The eNB 20 will select a candidate WAN UE associated with an attribute value difference that meets the target difference Threshold1 (e.g. having Δpower above a target power difference)
Returning to the step 206, the transmission parameter that can be adjusted for obtaining the target difference could be for example any one or any combination of a transmitting power, a modulation scheme, a coding scheme, an antenna parameter etc.
As a variation to this embodiment described above in connection with
The SIC process attempts to detect and decode one by one the interferers of interest. In LTE, the Hard SIC can take advantage of the Cyclic Redundancy Check attached to each transport block issued by the Medium Access Control (MAC) layer before channel coding: if the CRC check is successful, the transport block has been correctly decoded and the signal can be reconstructed. After the received signal has been cleaned up from one interferer (generally the one with the highest received power), a second interferer can be processed, and so on. The Hard SIC however imposes the constraint that the Modulation and Coding Scheme (MCS) used by the first interferer be more robust than the MCS used for the signal of interest, as it will need to be decoded under the interference of the latter. Note that for the embodiment of multiple D2D pairs transmitting, the eNB processing of the steps described above in connection with
When the observed interference at a receiving D2D UE is high, the receiving device in the pair might keep failing to decode the transmitted message. This interference might be caused by a WAN UE or by another D2D device. According to one embodiment, if a D2D UE is experiencing high interference and is unable to decode successfully, it adopts one the following actions with equal probability (coin toss):
In doing so, the D2D UE might be able to perform SIC to remove the interference from other devices.
Those of skill would appreciate that any of the logical blocks, units, processors, and method steps described herein may be implemented using electronic (digital, analog or combinations) hardware, various forms of program or design code incorporating instructions or combinations of both. To clearly illustrate this interchangeability of hardware and software, the modules, blocks or units, various illustrative components, blocks, modules, circuits, are described generally in terms of their functionality. Whether such functionality is implemented as hardware or software depends upon the selected design. Skilled artisans may implement the described functionality in varying ways for each particular application, but such implementation decisions should not be interpreted as causing a departure from the scope of the present disclosure.
Returning to
Signal attribute detector 63 acquires measurements of respective parameters value for signals received from other UEs (WAN UEs or D2D UEs);
Memory 70 also includes a set of instructions 71 that enable operation of processor 80. Memory 70 can be any type of computer storage media and communication media including any medium that facilitates transfer of a computer program from one place to another and that can be accessed by a computer. By way of example, and not limitation, such computer-readable media can comprise RAM, ROM, EEPROM, CD-ROM or other optical disk storage, magnetic disk storage or other magnetic storage devices, or any other medium that can be used to carry or store desired program code in the form of instructions or data structures and that can be accessed by a computer.
For example, if the instruction set 71 is transmitted from a remote source using a coaxial cable, fiber optic cable, twisted pair, digital subscriber line (DSL), or wireless technologies (infrared, radio, and microwave), then the coaxial cable, fiber optic cable, twisted pair, DSL, or wireless technologies are included in the definition of medium.
The processor 80 is shown to include a Avalue (or attribute value difference determinator) block 81, which determines the differences between the first attribute values acquired for the WAN UEs UE1 to UEN and the second attribute value for the D2D link 41. As indicated above, the value could be in one embodiment the power of the respective signal received at the eNB. Then, for the example when the attribute value is a power measurement, the Δpowers are compared with Threshold1 in comparator 82. The WAN UEs for which the Δpower is greater than Threshold1, can be selected to share the uplink transmission resources with the D2D communication. If the Δpower for the WAN signal 40 and interferer signal 42 is close to the target Threshold1, attribute control unit 84 will transmit power adjustment signals to any of the transmitting devices 10 and 25, to adjust their transmit power for obtaining the Δpower equal or greater than Threshold1. Depending on the particular configuration, the Power control unit 84 will increase or decrease the transmitting power of WAN device 10, or will increase or decrease the transmitting power of D2D transmitting device 10, or both.
If e.g. UE 25 is selected based on the Δpower condition, a scheduler 83 provides an allocation message to UE 25 and to D2D transmitting UE 10, the message indicating the same PRB to be used by both devices. Or, if one of the WAN UE 25 or the transmitting D2D UE 10 already uses the respective PRB, the other of the D2D UE 10 or the WAN UE 25 will receive an allocation of the same PRB.
The processor 80 is illustrated as also comprising an interference detector and canceller 64. Interference canceller 64 illustrates in general terms use of an interference cancellation protocol of choice for removing the interfering signal from the received signals, with a view to extract the WAN signal. It is to be noted that interference canceller 64 is shown as part of the processor 80, for illustration purposes; functionality of this module may be implemented by transceiver 60.
Processor 80 may be implemented by one or more processors.
Embodiment 1. A method of interference management of multiuser in-coverage device-to-device communications at a network node, comprising:
receiving (200) a WAN signal from a WAN device, the WAN signal mixed with an interferer signal caused by a D2D communication between a transmitting D2D device and a receiving D2D device of a D2D pair;
determining (202) an attribute value difference between a first attribute value of the WAN signal and a second attribute value of the interferer signal;
if the attribute value difference does not meet a target difference (204), controlling (206) a transmission parameter of at least one of the WAN device and the transmitting D2D wireless device to adjust the difference to meet the target difference.
Embodiment 2. A method as in embodiment 1, wherein if the attribute value difference meets the target difference, allocating a transmission resource to the WAN device for communication with the network node and to the transmitting D2D wireless device for communication with the receiving D2D wireless device.
Embodiment 3. A method as in embodiment 2 wherein the transmission resources allocated by the network node to the WAN device are shared with the D2D wireless device.
Embodiment 4. A method as in embodiment 2, further comprising:
determining a second attribute value difference between a further first attribute value of a second WAN signal received at the network node from a second transmitting WAN device and a further second attribute value of a second interferer signal mixed with the second WAN signal by the D2D communication; and
if the second attribute value difference meets the target difference, additionally allocating transmission resources to the second transmitting WAN device, for communication with the network node.
Embodiment 5. A method as in embodiment 1, further comprising performing an interference cancelation process (210) for separating the WAN signal from the interferer signal.
Embodiment 6. A method as in embodiment 5, wherein performing an interference cancelation process (210) includes performing at the network node one or more of successive interference cancellation, parallel interference cancellation and interference rejection combining (IRC) operations.
Embodiment 7. A method as in embodiment 1, further comprising, if the attribute value difference cannot be adjusted to meet the target difference, determining a second attribute value difference between a further first attribute value of a second WAN signal received at the network node from a second transmitting WAN device and a further second attribute value of a second interferer signal mixed with the second WAN signal by the D2D communication.
Embodiment 8. A method as in embodiment 1, wherein the first attribute and the second attribute include a power value associated with the WAN signal and a power value associated with the interferer signal.
Embodiment 9. A method as in embodiment 1, wherein the attribute value difference is a received power difference.
Embodiment 10. A method as in embodiment 9, wherein the target difference is met when the power difference is greater than a preset threshold.
Embodiment 11. A method as in embodiment 10, wherein the preset threshold is determined as a function of one or more or any combination of a received power of the WAN signal, a received power of the interferer signal, and a channel quality indicator (CQI) for the link between the WAN device and the network node.
Embodiment 12. A method as in embodiment 10, wherein the preset threshold is determined using a function of one or more network configuration and operational parameters.
Embodiment 13. A method as in embodiment 1, wherein controlling a transmission parameter comprises providing a control message to the WAN device specifying an adjustment of the transmission parameter.
Embodiment 14. A method as in embodiment 1, wherein controlling a transmission parameter comprises providing a control message to the transmitting D2D device specifying an adjustment of the transmission parameter.
Embodiment 15. A method as in embodiment 1, wherein the transmission parameter is one or more of a transmitting power, a modulation scheme, a coding scheme, and an antenna parameter.
Embodiment 16. A method as in embodiment 1, further comprising:
determining a third attribute value difference between the first attribute value of a WAN signal and a further second attribute value of a second interferer signal mixed with the WAN signal by a second transmitting D2D wireless device in communication with a second receiving D2D device;
if the third attribute value difference meets the target difference, additionally allocating from the network node the shared transmission resource to the second transmitting D2D wireless devices for D2D communication.
Embodiment 17. A network node (20) for a wireless communication system comprising:
a transceiver operable to determine a first attribute value of a WAN signal received from a WAN device and a second attribute value of an interferer signal mixed with the WAN signal due to a D2D communication between a transmitting
D2D wireless device and a receiving D2D wireless device of a D2D pair; and circuitry containing instructions which when executed cause the network node to
Embodiment 18. A network node as in embodiment 7, the circuitry further comprising instructions which when executed cause the network node to allocate transmission resources to the WAN device for communication with the network node and to the transmitting D2D wireless device for communication with the receiving D2D wireless device if the attribute value difference meets the target difference.
Embodiment 19. A network node as in embodiment 18, the circuitry further comprising instructions which when executed cause the network node to allocate the D2D wireless device the same transmission resources as the transmission resources allocated to the WAN device.
Embodiment 20. A network node as in embodiment 18, the circuitry further comprising instructions which when executed cause the network node to:
determine a second attribute value difference between a further first attribute value of a second WAN signal received at the network node from a second transmitting WAN device and a further second attribute value of a second interferer signal mixed with the second WAN signal by the D2D communication; and
if the second attribute value difference meets the target difference, additionally allocating the shared transmission resource to the second transmitting WAN device, for communication with the network node.
Embodiment 21. A network node as in embodiment 17, the circuitry further comprising instructions which when executed cause the network node to use an interference cancelation process for separating the WAN signal from the interferer signal.
Embodiment 22. A network node as in embodiment 21, the circuitry further comprising instructions which when executed cause the network node to perform one or more of successive interference cancellation, parallel interference cancellation and interference rejection combining (IRC) operations.
Embodiment 23. A network node as in embodiment 17, the circuitry further comprising instructions which when executed cause the network node, if the attribute value difference cannot be adjusted to meet the target difference, to determine a second difference between a further first attribute value of a second WAN signal received at the network node from a second transmitting WAN device and a further second attribute value of a second interferer signal mixed with the second WAN signal by the D2D communication.
Embodiment 24. A network node as in embodiment 17, wherein the first attribute and the second attribute include a power value associated with the WAN signal and a power value associated with the interferer signal.
Embodiment 25. A network node as in embodiment 17, wherein the attribute value difference is a power difference.
Embodiment 26. A network node as in embodiment 25, wherein the target difference is met when the power difference is greater than a preset threshold.
Embodiment 27. A network node as in embodiment 26, wherein the preset threshold is determined as a function of one or more of a received power of the WAN signal, a received power of the interferer signal, and a channel quality indicator (CQI) for the link between the WAN device and the network node.
Embodiment 28. A network node as in embodiment 26, wherein the preset threshold is determined using a function of one or more network configuration and operational parameters.
Embodiment 29. A network node as in embodiment 17, wherein controlling a transmission parameter comprises controlling transmission power of any of the WAN device, D2D transmitter device or both.
Embodiment 30. A network node as in embodiment 17, wherein the transmission parameter is one or more of a transmitting power, a modulation scheme, a coding scheme, and an antenna parameter.
Embodiment 31. A network node as in embodiment 17, further comprising
determining a third difference between the first attribute value of a WAN signal and a further second attribute value of a second interferer signal mixed with the WAN signal by a second transmitting D2D wireless device in communication with a second receiving D2D device;
Embodiment 32. The network node (1) of any of embodiments 17-31, wherein said circuitry comprises at least one processor (80) and memory (70) coupled to said processor, said memory comprising said instructions.
Embodiment 32. A computer readable medium adapted to store instructions, which when executed by one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to carry out the method according to any of embodiments 1-16.
Embodiment 33. A computer program comprising instructions which, when executed on at least one processor (80), cause the at least one processor (80) to carry out the method according to any one of embodiments Error! Reference source not found. -16.
Embodiment 34. A carrier containing the computer program of embodiment 33, wherein the carrier is one of an electronic signal, an optical signal, a radio signal, or a computer readable storage medium.
Embodiment 35. A network node (20) comprising:
means for receiving (200) a WAN signal from a WAN device, the WAN signal mixed with an interferer signal caused by a D2D communication between a transmitting D2D device and a receiving D2D device of a D2D pair;
means for determining (202)a difference between a first attribute value of the WAN signal and a second attribute value of the interferer signal; and
means for, if the attribute value difference does not meet a target difference (204), controlling (206) a transmission parameter of any of the WAN device and the transmitting D2D wireless device to adjust the difference to meet the target difference.
Embodiment 36. A network node (20) comprising:
a receiver operative to receive (200) a WAN signal from a WAN device, the WAN signal mixed with an interferer signal caused by a D2D communication between a transmitting D2D device and a receiving D2D device of a D2D pair;
an attribute value difference determinator (81) operative to determine (202) a attribute value difference between a first attribute value of the WAN signal and a second attribute value of the interferer signal; and
a power control unit (84) operative to, if the attribute value difference does not meet a target difference (204), control (206) a transmission parameter of any of the WAN device and the transmitting D2D wireless device to adjust the difference to meet the target difference.
The above description is provided to enable persons skilled in the art to implement the various embodiments described and illustrated. The described methods and apparatuses are presented for purpose of illustration and not of limitation. It should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made and still fall within the broad scope of the present methods and apparatuses described in this specification. For example, many of the features and functions discussed above can be implemented in software, hardware, or firmware, or a combination thereof. Also, many alternatives, variations, and modifications will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. Other such alternatives, variations, and modifications are intended to fall within the scope of the following appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2015/057402 | 9/25/2015 | WO | 00 |