Title :
High-SIR Transmission Capacity of Wireless Networks With General Fading and Node Distribution
Author :
Ganti, Radha Krishna ; Andrews, Jeffrey G. ; Haenggi, Martin
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
fDate :
5/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In many wireless systems, interference is the main performance-limiting factor, and is primarily dictated by the locations of concurrent transmitters. In many earlier works, the locations of the transmitters is often modeled as a Poisson point process for analytical tractability. While analytically convenient, the PPP only accurately models networks whose nodes are placed independently and use ALOHA as the channel access protocol, which preserves the independence. Correlations between transmitter locations in non-Poisson networks, which model intelligent access protocols, makes the outage analysis extremely difficult. In this paper, we take an alternative approach and focus on an asymptotic regime where the density of interferers η goes to 0. We prove for general node distributions and fading statistics that the success probability Ps ~ 1 - γηκ for η → 0, and provide values of γ and κ for a number of important special cases. We show that κ is lower bounded by 1 and upper bounded by a value that depends on the path loss exponent and the fading. This new analytical framework is then used to characterize the transmission capacity of a very general class of networks, defined as the maximum spatial density of active links given an outage constraint.
Keywords :
access protocols; error statistics; fading channels; radio networks; stochastic processes; ALOHA; Poisson point process; analytical tractability; channel access protocol; fading statistics; general fading; general node distributions; high-SIR transmission capacity; intelligent access protocols; maximum spatial density; nonPoisson networks; outage analysis; path loss exponent; transmitter locations; wireless networks; wireless systems; Interference; Media Access Protocol; Multiaccess communication; Rayleigh channels; Transmitters; Wireless networks; Interference; non-Poisson; outage probability; transmission capacity; wireless networks;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2011.2120230