Analytical Modeling of Wi-Fi and LTE-LAA Coexistence: Throughput and Impact of Energy Detection Threshold

With both small-cell LTE and Wi-Fi networks available as alternatives for deployment in unlicensed bands (notably 5 GHz), the investigation into their coexistence is a topic of active interest, primarily driven by industry groups. 3GPP has recently standardized LTE licensed assisted access (LTE-LAA)...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE/ACM transactions on networking Vol. 26; no. 4; pp. 1990 - 2003
Main Authors Mehrnoush, Morteza, Sathya, Vanlin, Roy, Sumit, Ghosh, Monisha
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York IEEE 01.08.2018
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
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Summary:With both small-cell LTE and Wi-Fi networks available as alternatives for deployment in unlicensed bands (notably 5 GHz), the investigation into their coexistence is a topic of active interest, primarily driven by industry groups. 3GPP has recently standardized LTE licensed assisted access (LTE-LAA) that seeks to make LTE more co-existence friendly with Wi-Fi by incorporating similar sensing and back-off features. Nonetheless, the results presented by industry groups offer little consensus on important issues like respective network parameter settings that promote "fair access" as required by 3GPP. Answers to such key system deployment aspects, in turn, require credible analytical models, on which there has been a little progress to date. Accordingly, in one of the first works of its kind, we develop a new framework for estimating the throughput of Wi-Fi and LTE-LAA in coexistence scenarios via suitable modifications to the celebrated Bianchi model. The impact of various network parameters such as energy detection threshold on Wi-Fi and LTE-LAA coexistence is explored as a byproduct and corroborated via a National Instrument experimental test bed that validates the results for LTE-LAA access priority classes 1 and 3.
ISSN:1063-6692
1558-2566
DOI:10.1109/TNET.2018.2856901