Title :
Capacity regions for wireless ad hoc networks
Author :
Toumpis, Stavros ; Goldsmith, Andrea J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Stanford Univ., CA, USA
fDate :
7/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We define and study capacity regions for wireless ad hoc networks with an arbitrary number of nodes and topology. These regions describe the set of achievable rate combinations between all source-destination pairs in the network under various transmission strategies, such as variable-rate transmission, single-hop or multihop routing, power control, and successive interference cancellation (SIC). Multihop cellular networks and networks with energy constraints are studied as special cases. With slight modifications, the developed formulation can handle node mobility and time-varying flat-fading channels. Numerical results indicate that multihop routing, the ability for concurrent transmissions, and SIC significantly increase the capacity of ad hoc and multihop cellular networks. On the other hand, gains from power control are significant only when variable-rate transmission is not used. Also, time-varying flat-fading and node mobility actually improve the capacity. Finally, multihop routing greatly improves the performance of energy-constraint networks.
Keywords :
ad hoc networks; cellular radio; channel capacity; fading channels; interference suppression; power control; telecommunication network routing; time-varying channels; SIC; achievable rate combinations; capacity regions; concurrent transmissions; energy-constraint networks; multihop cellular networks; multihop routing; node mobility; power control; single-hop routing; source-destination pairs; successive interference cancellation; time-varying flat-fading channels; variable-rate transmission; wireless ad hoc networks; Ad hoc networks; Interference cancellation; Land mobile radio cellular systems; Mobile ad hoc networks; Network topology; Power control; Protocols; Routing; Silicon carbide; Spread spectrum communication;
Journal_Title :
Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TWC.2003.814342