Title :
Addressing the Hidden Terminal Problem for Heterogeneous Coexistence Between TDM and CSMA Networks in White Space
Author :
Kaigui Bian ; Jung-Min Park ; Lin Chen ; Xiaoming Li
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electron. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Peking Univ., Beijing, China
Abstract :
Cognitive radio (CR) technologies have led to several wireless standards (e.g., IEEE 802.11af and IEEE 802.22) that enable secondary networks to access the TV white-space (TVWS) spectrum. Different unlicensed wireless technologies with different PHY/MAC designs are expected to coexist in the same TVWS spectrum-we refer to such a situation as heterogeneous coexistence. The heterogeneity of the PHY/MAC designs of coexisting CR networks can potentially exacerbate the hidden terminal problem. This problem cannot be addressed by the conventional handshaking/coordination mechanism between two homogeneous networks employing the same radio access technology. In this paper, we present a coexistence protocol, called Spectrum Sharing for Heterogeneous Coexistence (SHARE), that mitigates the hidden terminal problem for the coexistence between two types of networks: one that employs a time-division-multiplexing-based MAC protocol and one that employs a carrier-sense-multiple-access-based MAC protocol. Specifically, SHARE utilizes beacon transmissions and dynamic quiet periods to avoid packet collisions caused by the hidden terminals. Our analytical and simulation results show that SHARE reduces the number of packet collisions and guarantees weighted fairness in partitioning the spectrum among the coexisting secondary networks.
Keywords :
access protocols; carrier sense multiple access; cognitive radio; radio spectrum management; television; time division multiplexing; CSMA network; PHY/MAC designs; SHARE protocol; TDM network; TV white-space; TVWS spectrum; beacon transmissions; carrier-sense-multiple-access-based MAC protocol; cognitive radio technologies; coordination mechanism; handshaking mechanism; heterogeneous coexistence; hidden terminal problem; packet collisions avoidance; radio access technology; secondary networks; spectrum sharing; time-division-multiplexing-based MAC protocol; unlicensed wireless technologies; wireless standards; IEEE 802.11 Standards; IEEE 802.16 Standards; Media Access Protocol; Multiaccess communication; Receivers; Time division multiplexing; Transmitters; Coexistence; heterogeneous wireless networks; hidden terminal problem;
Journal_Title :
Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TVT.2014.2311495