Cooperative wireless relay networks and the impact of fade duration
2020
In wireless communication networks, the Key Performance Indicator (KPI) parameters are mostly based on the average signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Other parameters
such as site selection during call initiation, handoff, relay selection etc., are all based on
SNR. SNR has been commonly used as a benchmark and has masked the real picture of
the wireless network. In some instances, it might be misleading. This is mainly due to
the fact that rapid fluctuation of the signal (i.e., fading) is not taken into account in the
selection criteria. Such rapid signal change may cause significant loss of information,
degrade signal quality for voice or video connections, or could make the channel coding
fail. An alternative method to using SNR in a wireless network is to consider fading.
Such parameters include average fade duration (AFD) and fade duration outage probability (FDOP), which are based on time correlation statistics. Both the AFD and the FDOP
are computed in reference to a threshold value for signal quality. The main purpose of this dissertation work is to apply FDOP and AFD in broad wireless network applications
and show that such methods need to be used in 5G and beyond wireless communication.
The specific applications that are studied are cooperative relaying, neighbor cell list, and
femtocell sleep mode activation. In all of those applications, the use of fade duration is
novel. Because fade duration methods more accurately control the fading nature and the
true quality of the signal, its application is vital to get the true nature of quality of service
performance in wireless communication networks.
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