Cross-layer design of admission control policies in code division multiple access communications systems utilizing beamforming
Abstract (Summary)
To meet growing demand for wireless access to multimedia traffic, future generations
of wireless networks need to provide heterogenous services with high data rate and guaranteed
quality-of-service (QoS). Many enabling technologies to ensure QoS have been
investigated, including cross-layer admission control (AC), error control and congestion
control.
In this thesis, we study the cross-layer AC problem. While previous research focuses
on single-antenna systems, which does not capitalize on the significant benefits provided
by multiple antenna systems, in this thesis we investigate cross-layer AC policy for a codedivision-multiple-access
(CDMA) system with antenna arrays at the base station (BS). Automatic
retransmission request (ARQ) schemes are also exploited to further improve the
spectral efficiency.
In the first part, a circuit-switched network is considered and an exact outage probability
is developed, which is then employed to derive the optimal call admission control (CAC)
policy by formulating a constrained semi-Markov decision process (SMDP). The derived
optimal policy can maximize the system throughput with guaranteed QoS requirements in
both physical and network layers.
In the second part, a suboptimal low-complexity CAC policy is proposed based on an
approximate power control feasibility condition (PCFC) and a reduced-outage-probability
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algorithm. Comparison between optimal and suboptimal CAC policies shows that the suboptimal
CAC policy can significantly reduce the computational complexity at a cost of
degraded performance.
In the third part, we extend the above research to packet-switched networks. A novel
SMDP is formulated by incorporating ARQ protocols. Packet-level AC policies are then
proposed. The proposed policies exploit the error control capability provided by ARQ
schemes, while simultaneously guaranteeing QoS requirements in the physical and packet
levels.
In the fourth part, we propose a connection admission control policy in a connectionoriented
packet-switched network, which can guarantee QoS requirements in physical,
packet and connection levels. By considering joint optimization across different layers,
the proposed optimal policy provides a flexible way to handle multiple QoS requirements,
while at the same time, maximizing the overall system throughput.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:Queen's University (Kingston, Ont.). Theses (Queen's University (Kingston, Ont.)); Steven Blostein; Electrical & Computer Engineering
School:
School Location:
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:cross layer design admission control wireless communications
ISBN:
Date of Publication:08/04/2008