The invention is based on a priority application EP 06290470.1 which is hereby incorporated by reference.
The invention relates to a method for scheduling of user terminals to subcarriers in a multi-cell or multi-sector network using FDM transmission with interference coordination and with the frequency band used for FDM transmission being subdivided into at least two frequency subsets, wherein
Frequency division multiplexing (FDM) transmission schemes such as Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM), single carrier Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA) or distributed FDMA such as interleaved FDMA with multiple terminals will become increasingly important e.g. for future evolutions of air interfaces for mobile radio systems. Those radio systems are currently under discussion e.g. in Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) Technical Specification Group (TSG) Radio Access Network (RAN), for Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) e.g. according to standard IEEE 802.11a, or for a 4th generation air interface.
Given the licensed bandwidth, transmission capacity from network providers e.g. for picture uploading or video communication has to be as high as possible for all users to serve as many subscribers as possible. Further the quality of service experienced by the user and especially the coverage of the service is an important property demanded by the user. So an access scheme shall work well at the cell borders of networks with frequency reuse.
In cellular systems with a frequency reuse factor of 1 the signal to interference ratio at the cell border can approach the factor 1 or 0 dB, so that no useful transmission from a user terminal to the base station can be kept up if a user terminal from a neighboring cell is near to the considered user terminal and sends with the same power on the same frequencies.
Therefore in CDMA (CDMA=Code Division Multiple Access) a soft handover exists and the user terminals always use a different (terminal specific) scrambling code in the uplink. The reception is then possible using the spreading gain from CDMA. As is known due to the strong interference the uplink capacity is considerably limited.
In FDM transmission, frequency groups are allocated to a user terminal instead of codes in CDMA transmission. In FDMA orthogonal transmission schemes, frequencies are also allocated to a user terminal. So in these schemes in contrast to CDMA transmission, interference can be planned and avoided. For these orthogonal transmission schemes the problem at the cell border has to be solved as well.
A known concept of frequency planning for the cells is giving each whole cell a distinct frequency band.
However, frequency distribution to the different cells reduces the available uplink resources per cell very considerably e.g. by a factor of ⅓ or 1/7 and thus the overall system throughput. It is a waste of resources for the inner area of a cell.
A frequency reuse of e.g. ⅓ only in the outer part of the cell is possible but still wastes too much resources.
A possible concept for coordination of the interference between cells of a network with frequency reuse offering a good usage of the available resources is to subdivide the overall frequency resource into frequency subsets. In every cell a dedicated frequency subset is used with a power restriction. This dedicated frequency subset is assigned by neighbouring cells to user terminals approaching this cell.
Such a concept for the downlink is e.g. disclosed in the document R1-05-0594 with the title “Multi-cell Simulation Results for Interference Co-ordination in new OFDM DL” presented at 3GPP TSG RAN WG1 LTE Ad Hoc on LTE in Sophia Antipolis, France, 20-21 Jun. 2005. For the uplink, such a concept is disclosed in the document R1-05-0593 with the title “Interference coordination for evolved UTRA uplink access” presented at RAN1 AdHoc on LTE, Sophia Antipolis, France, 20-21 Jun. 2005.
Independent of the distribution of user terminals within a cell, the user terminals have to be scheduled to subcarriers in a way to fully exploit the advantages of interference coordination in a multi-cell scenario, i.e. to guarantee a high cell throughput, and at the same time to guarantee a minimum bitrate performance for the individual user terminals.
The object of the invention is thus to propose a method for scheduling of user terminals to subcarriers in a multi-cell or multi-sector network using FDM transmission that guarantees a high cell throughput and a minimum bitrate performance for the individual user terminals.
This object is achieved by a method according to the teaching of claim 1, a base station according to the teaching of claim 5, a user terminal according to the teaching of claim 6 and a network according to the teaching of claim 8.
The main idea of the invention is to measure or to model by means of the signal to interference ratio measured by user terminals the data throughput of said user terminals dependent on the frequency subset and to allocate subcarriers preferably to user terminals with a high signal to interference ratio on said subcarriers.
Furthermore, subcarriers are allocated in clusters to the user terminals, whereby all clusters offer the same data throughput for the respective user terminal.
Further developments of the invention can be gathered from the dependent claims and the following description.
In the following the invention will be explained further making reference to the attached drawings.
A network according to the invention comprises user terminals and base stations.
Each of said user terminals is connected to one or multiple of said base stations, and the base stations are in turn connected via base station controllers to a core network.
The user terminals comprise the functionality of a user terminal for transmission and reception in a network for FDM transmission, i.e. they can be connected to a network by means of a base station. This can be used in uplink to determine based on reciprocity the target neighbor base station which is strongest affected by interference produced by the user terminal.
Furthermore, a user terminal according to the invention comprises at least one processing means adapted for measurement of the received power levels from serving and interfering cells or sectors, determination of the cell or sector being the source for the strongest interference for said user terminal and sending of said received power levels from serving and interfering cells or sectors to a base station.
The base stations comprise the functionality of a base station of a network for FDM transmission, i.e. they provide the possibility for user terminals to get connected to the network.
Furthermore, the base station according to the invention comprises at least one processing means adapted for
In the following, by way of example the method according to the invention is described in detail making reference to
The invention is based on partitioning the frequency band into frequency subsets.
A power planning for the use of frequency subsets out of the frequency bands by the base station of a specific cell is possible. Depending on to which cell a base station belongs, in the downlink a dedicated subset can only be used with a restricted power in the cell.
This power restriction is illustrated in the lower part of
In
The sectors are denoted Sn with n indicating the dedicated frequency subset Fn of the respective sector that is used with restricted power, or that is designated in uplink to be burdened by neighbor cell terminal interference and the frequency subsets Fk that are preferrably used by user terminals in the border regions of the sectors are denoted with the number k. In the inner area of the sectors, all frequency subsets are used for uplink or downlink but the respective dedicated subset Fn is reduced in power in downlink or in uplink it is burdened more by interference and can only be used under observation of the strong inter-cell interference inside this inner area.
User terminals are distributed across cells and are allocated to a sector as serving sector in case of sectorized cells.
The serving sector is for example a sector where frequency subset Fx is restricted in power.
The object of the invention is now to schedule the user terminals to subcarriers inside the serving sector Sx.
Depending on the received power from serving and interfering sectors it is decided whether a user terminal experiences improved signal to interference ratio in certain frequency subsets that are restricted in power in neighboring cells and are thus preferred frequency subsets for said user terminal or if all frequency subsets have the same signal to interference ratio and are thus equally appropriate for scheduling of said user terminal e.g. because it is in the inner area of the serving sector near to the antenna. Or in uplink based on measurements where strongest interference is caused, or alternatively based on power levels from serving and interfering cells received by the user terminal, the frequency subset is determined that is dedicated to bear interference in the nearest neighbor cell or sector and is thus the preferred frequency subset.
So the user terminals are sorted into groups or sets Θ0, Θ1, Θ2, . . . , ΘR. The group Θ0 contains the user terminals that have no frequency subset preference probably because the user terminals are located near the antenna. All user terminals inside group Θi experience a sector with restrictions in the frequency subset Fi as their strongest interfering sector. Since it is assumed that the frequency subset Fx is restricted in power inside the serving sector Sx, the signal to interference ratio achievable in said frequency subset is restricted.
The number of user terminals inside each group is denoted N0, N1, . . . , NR respectively. The user terminals itself can then also be denoted T01, T02, . . . T11, T12, T13, . . . TR1, TR2, TR3 . . . and so on. Now, the data throughput potential for the user terminals has to be determined. Referring to the so-called Shannon limit, the data throughput in the limit would be
In this formula fB denotes the bandwidth, S denotes the signal strength and I denotes the interference strength.
For frequencies out of the frequency subset F3 an improved signal to interference ratio of maybe 3-4 dB due to interference coordination is experienced by the user terminal. For frequencies out of the frequency subsets F2, F4, F5 etc. that are not used with restricted power inside the sector Sx signal to interference ratio of about 0 dB is experienced and for frequencies out of the frequency subset Fx that is used with restricted power, a signal to interference ratio of only −10 dB or less is seen at the cell border.
From that information, the data throughput for a user terminals can be directly calculated depending on, from which part of the spectrum frequencies are allocated to the user terminal. Thus at the y-axis the data throughput values for frequencies enjoying interference coordination Dc and for frequencies without improvement Du are denoted. The possible data throughput for frequencies that are restricted in power in the serving sector is denoted Dr. For a user terminal that is in the bad situation that it experiences as strongest interfering neighbor a sector in which the same frequency subset Fx is restricted in power as in its serving sector, i.e. for a terminal from group Θx, all frequencies can only be used with a signal to interference ratio of at most 0 dB. In the restricted frequency subset itself, because the second strongest interfering neighbor sector interferes with full power, a signal to interference ratio of only approx. −4 dB occurs. This results in a reduced data throughput for the frequency subset Fx.
For the user terminals that are in group Θ0, all frequency subsets besides Fx can equally be used with high signal to interference ratio which will result in a high data throughput denoted aDu in
In uplink in a similar way preferred and unpreferred subsets are given and due to the power limitation in non-preferred subsets required by the scheme throughput calculations can be done.
In the following the invention is disclosed for downlink transmission, but it can be applied to uplink transmission in an analogue way.
To a user terminal, normally frequencies from its preferred frequency subset are allocated, but if there are too many user terminals in the same cell region, a shortage of frequencies in the preferred frequency subset occurs. So it is seen that some user terminals need to share a preferred frequency subset while other user terminals have a whole preferred frequency subset on their own. In the case of shortage then also frequencies from other frequency subsets have to be allocated to the multiple user terminals.
Independent of the distribution of the user terminals in the cells, all user terminals have to be scheduled to subcarriers in a way to fully exploit the advantages of interference coordination in a multi-cell scenario and at the same time, a minimum bitrate performance has to be guaranteed.
The invention is now to use a scheduler that is parameterized and is optimally exploiting this situation. That is, the invention is that the data throughput situation for the user terminals over the R frequency subsets is simply modeled or determined by measurement and that the frequency bandwidth or the time-frequency resources over a dedicated number of transmission time intervals are distributed to the user terminals.
In a preferred embodiment, for maximization of the sector throughput the remaining frequency bandwidth is allocated to user terminals having the highest signal to interference ratio.
Thus, according to the invention, the frequency bandwidth or the time-frequency resources are allocated to the user terminals in border regions exploiting the improved data throughput in the preferred frequency subset as much as possible but also allocating unpreferred frequency subsets to user terminals in overpopulated border regions. Unpreferred frequency subsets or left over frequency bandwidth or time-frequency resources are also allocated to user terminals in the inner region of a cell. The approximate data throughput from said allocations is calculated for the user terminals.
In a preferred embodiment, said allocation of frequency bandwidth or time-frequency resources is done until a desired approximate data throughput Thdes, or a minimum data throughput is reached for all scheduled user terminals. The desired approximate data throughput Thdes is a parameter that can be varied according to needs.
In a preferred embodiment, after said allocation, the remaining frequency bandwidth or time-frequency resources, if available at this scheduling instant, is distributed to user terminals in good reception or transmission conditions so as to maximize the sector throughput, which relates to the mean user terminal data throughput.
More specifically, based on the allocation of user terminals to groups, the approach is that the individual data throughput of the user terminals, i.e. the minimum user terminal data throughput or cell edge bitrate that can occur is especially taken care of and is made as large as possible.
The situation for distributing the preferred frequency subsets to the user terminals is shown in
In
The number of user terminals allocated to each frequency subset can be different. According to the example shown in
In each frequency subset now the preferred frequencies are allocated to the user terminals so that all user terminals do have the same data throughput. This can be thought in a way that for all user terminals according to the arrows inside the frequency subsets by successive allocation the frequencies are equally allocated. This can be performed until the frequency subset with the highest number of user terminals F3 is completely distributed or used up. Then for the terminals T31, T32, T33, T34 frequencies from other unpreferred frequency subsets e.g. from F4 have to be allocated. So one can say an extended bandwidth fu1 from other frequency subsets has to be allocated additionally to said terminals T31, T32, T33, T34. Because for said extended bandwidth the signal to interference ratio is lower and the user terminals experience less data throughput per frequency or subcarrier compared to the preferred frequency subset, more subcarriers from the unpreferred frequency subsets have to be allocated in compensation to achieve the same user terminal data throughput. At the same time the other user terminals get also allocated further frequencies from their preferred frequency subset.
If one considers e.g. the case that the frequency subsets shall be used up and the frequency subsets of lower load are fully brought in to support the frequency subsets of overload one can note the formulas for e.g. two groups of user terminals. The user terminal data throughput Tha would then be
Thus it follows:
In these formulas, fp1 denotes the frequency bandwidth that is used from the preferred frequency subset of the first group, fp2 denotes the frequency bandwidth that is used from the preferred frequency subset of the second group, and fu1 denotes the frequency bandwidth that is used from an unpreferred frequency subset for user terminals of the first group.
These formulas could also be set up if one considers more than two, but all groups. Then also a system of multiple equations has to be solved.
Yet the question to find the frequency subsets that are completely filled by user terminals assigned to them and the frequency subsets that are only partly filled by assigned user terminals but also occupied by other user terminals is a multiple decision problem.
This balancing out between the groups is important for the cell edge bit rate compared to the case of scheduling without interference coordination. This is shown in the example shown in
In
The situation with interference coordination is depicted in
In order to solve this distribution problem according to our approach the following successive filling algorithm can be used for example.
The minimal or quantized bandwidth that can be allocated to a user terminal is then
The user terminals are sorted into groups as given above.
Then the idea of the algorithm is that in the first case it goes on as before but for the user terminals in the already used up frequency subsets the allocation is done in unpreferred frequency subsets while the expected reduced signal to interference ratio is taken care of in the amount of frequency bandwidth that needs to be allocated in unpreferred frequency subsets.
So in detail, for the user terminals with a used up preferred frequency subset e.g. Tij the amount Fext ij of extension bandwidth is counted and is incremented by (DC/DU)·FΔ. For the other regions the allocation goes on as before until Thmin reaches Thdes or until Frem n reaches 0.
If this is the case all the frequency spectrum needed for certain user terminals is allocated.
Now the preliminary regions have to be solved up and possibly remaining spectrum has to be allocated. For that the cases have to be distinguished whether there is a Θ0-user terminal or not.
Now for the user terminals in the already used up frequency subsets that have filled preliminary regions and for the Θx-user terminals and the Θ0-user terminals the remaining spectrum is allocated in the amount as was calculated before. So for Tij for example Fext ij/FΔ increments of FΔ are allocated from the first free frequency subset. This goes on until all preliminary regions are solved up again.
If Frem n or Frem x was greater than zero there is still some spectrum remaining. The idea is now that his spectrum is allocated to user terminals to boost the sector data throughput. So if a Θ0-user terminal is available the spectrum is totally allocated to the Θ0-user terminal with the best channel condition or if no Θ0-user terminal is available it is allocated to the user terminal from the available user terminals with the best channel condition as described in the special distribution DD. Thus the desired minimum user terminal throughput should be guaranteed while the maximum sector data throughput should be achieved.
Special distribution DD: The best Θi-user terminals that are in only partially filled regions are identified and the preferred frequency subset is allocated to them in the amount of Frem n. Then the preliminary regions are solved up as described already.
Since Thdes can be changed the whole algorithm allows implementation of a parametric scheduler, which can be used to try out several settings.
The algorithm could also be used in a way until a certain Frem=Frem des is reached.
In the following, a method for an analytic bandwidth calculation is proposed.
The scheduling algorithm can be thought of in the following way: First the virtual allocation amount or credits are calculated analytically and then the corresponding real allocation to user terminals is carried out on this basis, in a final step.
If one calculates the consumed bandwidth for each user terminal or group of user terminals depending on their reception condition assuming a given minimum user terminal data throughput, the total bandwidth consumed for this guaranteed bit rate scheduling can be calculated and it can be checked if it is below the total available bandwidth. If this is the case the remaining bandwidth is given to the user terminals in the best reception conditions to maximize the sector data throughput.
In this sense the step 5 to 7 of the method described above can now also be approximated analytically when the reference data rate DC·FΔ that is allocated is counted by the number of virtual reservation cycles
times the bandwidth out of the preferred frequency subset Fi will be allocated. If the normalized data throughput is expressed in reservation cycles
can be reached.
If the preferred subsets are used up
gives the amount of FΔ that has to be allocated from unpreferred frequency subsets to get the desired terminal throughput if i≠x and i≠0.
So it can be calculated that the sum
gives the amount of bandwidth (in FΔ) used for all user terminals in the groups Θi with i≠x and i≠0. Using the definition su=Dc/Du and sh=Dc/(aDu) the bandwidth (in FΔ) used for Θx-user
terminals and Θ0-user terminals is given by:
Now the total available bandwidth Frem n=(R−1)·Q·FΔ has to be larger than this bandwidth needed to achieve the data throughput or cycles
needs to be tested for
If it is not fulfilled Thdes can not be reached in this scheduling instant. A certain value
In any case then
Then the number of cycles with preferred allocation is given as
If
From that the number of preferred and unpreferred allocations (or credits) for the user terminals in group Θi is given by:
The user terminal group Θx now gets
the user terminal group Θ0 gets
The number of allocations then has to be rounded to the next integer value. If the rounding up is not as frequent as rounding down it may happen that the allocation does not exactly match what is available as resources but this can simply be solved in a practical application in a real-time scheduler.
As next step of the scheduler, if there is bandwidth left over, this bandwidth is allocated e.g. to the Θ0-user terminal with highest signal to interference ratio to boost the sector throughput as described before.
As final step, based on the virtual allocations or credits the real allocations to the user terminals based on the credits take place using a real time scheduler that allocates FΔ bandwidth portions to the terminals until all credits are used up.
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