In recent years, mobile ad hoc networks have attracted significant attention due to their characteristics, which include a self-organizing structure, adaptiveness, robustness, etc. With the recent development and deployment of 3G mobile communication systems and research on future B3G/LTE systems, the convergence of ad hoc and cellular networks (i.e., terminals in the network can work in both ad hoc and cellular modes) has gained increased interest. A radio communication network in which the characteristics of both an ad hoc network and a cellular network are present may be referred to as a hybrid radio communication network.
To avoid the interference from the ad hoc terminals to the conventional terminals in such a network, the easiest method is to forbid the ad hoc terminals from using the downlink timeslots for communication. However, in multiple access systems, this will damage system efficiency significantly.
For hybrid radio communication networks, the possible interference from the ad hoc mobile terminals to the conventional terminals is estimated so that some ad hoc mobile terminals can still reuse the same downlink timeslots as the conventional terminals when the interference to the conventional terminals is bearable. Consequently, the system efficiency can be greatly improved as a result of the generation of less interference and greater resource reuse.
One method estimates the interference from the ad hoc terminal transmitters to the conventional terminal receivers in an ad hoc enabled cellular system, so that the ad hoc mobile terminals can select the proper radio resource for communication and avoid generating excessive interference to the conventional terminals. One form of the method has the following features:
1. The interference avoidance method is managed by the interference generator itself, i.e., the ad hoc terminal transmitter.
2. The ad hoc terminal measures three parameters for the interference estimation: its received uplink interference, the pathloss from it to the base stations and the received conventional power at the base stations.
3. By comparing a predefined threshold with the calculated results based on the measured parameters, the ad hoc terminal can decide whether it may cause excessive interference to the conventional mobile terminals nearby and decide whether the downlink timeslots can be used for ad hoc communication.
The whole procedure may be performed solely by the ad hoc mobile terminals, and the required parameters can be obtained easily. As a result, the solution is easy to implement and can suppress undesired interference while still keeping high spectrum efficiency.
Other features and advantages will be understood upon reading and understanding the detailed description of exemplary embodiments, found herein below, in conjunction with reference to the drawings, a brief description of which is provided below.
There follows a more detailed description of the present invention. Those skilled in the art will realize that the following detailed description is illustrative only and is not intended to be in any way limiting. Other embodiments of the present invention will readily suggest themselves to such skilled persons having the benefit of this disclosure. Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the present invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The same reference indicators will be used throughout the drawings and the following detailed description to refer to the same or like parts.
In cell Y, terminals C6 and C7 are conventional mobile terminals that have conventional links with the base station Y. The remaining terminals 5-8 are ad hoc mobile terminals, including in a fringe area Y′ beyond the range of the base station BS-Y ad hoc mobile terminals 4, 7 and 8. Ad hoc mobile terminal 4 communicates with the base station BS-Y through conventional mobile terminal C6 using cellular relaying. In this example, ad hoc mobile terminal 5 carries out broadcast multicast communication with ad hoc mobile terminals 6-8.
In an area including portions of fringe areas X′ and Y′ and a portion of cell Y, an ad hoc network is formed by ad hoc mobile terminals 9-16, which communicate amongst themselves using cellular frequencies.
Referring to
1. Interference IF1 from the ad hoc terminal transmitters to the base station receivers;
2. Interference IF2 from the base station transmitters to the ad hoc terminal receivers;
3. Interference IF3 from the ad hoc terminal transmitters to the conventional terminal receivers; and
4. Interference IF4 from the conventional terminal transmitters to the ad hoc terminal receivers.
The first two kinds of interference are easy to manage because the distances between the ad hoc terminals and the base stations are usually long enough to make the interference between them negligible. However, the last two kinds of interference should be carefully treated because the ad hoc terminals and conventional terminals may be very close to each other and therefore can cause serious interference.
For the interference from the conventional terminal transmitters to the ad hoc terminal receivers, the ad hoc terminal receivers can try to avoid it by dynamically adjusting to the radio resource with the least interference.
For the interference from the ad hoc terminal transmitters to the conventional terminals receivers, the solution is more difficult. In ad hoc enabled TDD cellular networks, severe interference from the ad hoc terminal transmitters to the conventional terminal receivers is generated by ad hoc terminals that use the conventional downlink timeslots for communication. Ad hoc terminals that use only the uplink timeslots for communication will not interfere with the conventional mobile terminals, because the conventional mobile terminals do not receive data in the uplink timeslots. As a result, it should be carefully decided whether the downlink timeslots can be allocated to the ad hoc terminals. The base station does not have any information about the interference among the conventional mobile terminals, so it can do nothing about this interference problem. In addition, the conventional terminals should not be changed because most of them will have already been sold before the addition of the ad hoc feature to the cellular system. As a result, the interference from the ad hoc terminal transmitters to the conventional terminal receivers can only be managed by the ad hoc terminals.
The pathloss between two mobile terminals has an effect on the interference between them. For the same transmission power, the lower the pathloss, the more the interference generated from one to the other. Therefore, the possible interference from the ad hoc mobile terminals to the conventional mobile terminals can be estimated by estimating the pathloss between them. Referring to
1. If PUL
L
A
B
=I
UL
/P
UL
Con (Equation 1).
2. If PCon
P
UL
Con
=P
Con
BS
/L
BS
Con (Equation 2).
3. Replacing PUL
L
A
B=(IUL×LBS/PCon
4. LBS
L
A
B=(IUL×LBS
Based on Equation 4, the ad hoc mobile terminals can estimate the pathloss between them and the conventional terminals in the uplink timeslots by having three parameters—IULBS
More particularly, in the ad hoc enabled cellular network, if the ad hoc terminals are within base station coverage, they may follow the same or similar access procedure as the conventional terminal before setting up communication links. During the access procedure, the base station can determine the power PAdhoc
The foregoing concerns the estimation of the pathloss from one conventional terminal to one ad hoc terminal. For the estimation of the interference from multiple conventional terminals to one ad hoc terminal, the same method based on Equation 4 can still be used to estimate the pathloss by assuming that multiple conventional terminals are mapped into one position. This assumption is reasonable, as the variation of the additive interference is much smaller than that of the pathloss. For the case of multiple conventional terminals, PCon
Referring to
1. Ad hoc mobile terminal M1 begins to test if the downlink timeslots are usable.
2. M1 periodically receives the downlink pilot signal sent by the base station. As the transmission power of the pilot signal is fixed, M1 can estimate the pathloss LBS
3. M1 periodically measures the interference level IUL at M1's receiver end in uplink timeslots.
4. M1 receives a message with the indication of PCon
5. M1 calculates LA
6. M1 compares LA
7. If permitted, M1 can continue the ad hoc communication by using radio resources in the downlink timeslots; otherwise M1 can only use uplink timeslots to set up/maintain the ad hoc communication.
The steps of the method of
Referring to
The three pieces of information needed by the resource allocation unit to perform the interference avoidance procedure of
To obtain IUL, the resource allocation unit causes the signal receiver 510 to be tuned to the targeted radio resource. The measurement unit 530 measures the received power signal level, which is read by the resource allocation unit 540. To obtain LBS
Using the foregoing information, the resource allocation unit 540 calculates LA
Although embodiments of the present invention have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alternations can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the inventions as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
200710164218.0 | Sep 2007 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2008/053972 | 9/30/2008 | WO | 00 | 8/25/2010 |