• DocumentCode
    1248029
  • Title

    Multicast Outage Probability and Transmission Capacity of Multihop Wireless Networks

  • Author

    Liu, Chun-Hung ; Andrews, Jeffrey G.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
  • Volume
    57
  • Issue
    7
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    7/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    4344
  • Lastpage
    4358
  • Abstract
    Multicast transmission, wherein the same packet must be delivered to multiple receivers, is an important aspect of sensor and tactical networks and has several distinctive traits as opposed to more commonly studied unicast networks. Specially, these include 1) identical packets must be delivered successfully to several nodes, 2) outage at any receiver requires the packet to be retransmitted at least to that receiver, and 3) the multicast rate is dominated by the receiver with the weakest link in order to minimize outage and retransmission. A first contribution of this paper is the development of a tractable multicast model and throughput metric that captures each of these key traits in a multicast wireless network. We utilize a Poisson cluster process (PCP) consisting of a distinct Poisson point process (PPP) for the transmitters and receivers, and then define the multicast transmission capacity (MTC) as the maximum achievable multicast rate per transmission attempt times the maximum intensity of multicast clusters under decoding delay and multicast outage constraints. A multicast cluster is a contiguous area over which a packet is multicasted, and to reduce outage it can be tessellated into v smaller regions of multicast. The second contribution of the paper is the analysis of several key aspects of this model, for which we develop the following main result. Assuming τ/v transmission attempts are allowed for each tessellated region in a multicast cluster, we show that the MTC is Θ(ρkxlog(k)vy) where ρ, x and y are functions of τ and v depending on the network size and intensity, and k is the average number of the intended receivers in a cluster. We derive {ρ, x, y} for a number of regimes of interest, and also show that an appropriate number of retransmissions can significantly enhance the MTC.
  • Keywords
    channel capacity; multicast communication; probability; radio receivers; radio transmitters; stochastic processes; MTC; Poisson cluster process; Poisson point process; multicast outage probability; multicast transmission capacity; multicast wireless network; multihop wireless networks; receivers; transmitters; Capacity planning; Decoding; Delay; Rayleigh channels; Receivers; Transmitters; Information theory; multicast outage; multicast transmission; network capacity; stochastic geometry;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9448
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TIT.2011.2146030
  • Filename
    5895051