Title :
Fine-Grained Channel Access in Wireless LAN
Author :
Ji Fang ; Kun Tan ; Yuanyang Zhang ; Shouyuan Chen ; Lixin Shi ; Jiansong Zhang ; Yongguang Zhang ; Zhenhui Tan
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Broadband Wireless Mobile Commun., Beijing Jiaotong Univ., Beijing, China
Abstract :
With the increasing of physical-layer (PHY) data rate in modern wireless local area networks (WLANs) (e.g., 802.11n), the overhead of media access control (MAC) progressively degrades data throughput efficiency. This trend reflects a fundamental aspect of the current MAC protocol, which allocates the channel as a single resource at a time. This paper argues that, in a high data rate WLAN, the channel should be divided into separate subchannels whose width is commensurate with the PHY data rate and typical frame size. Multiple stations can then contend for and use subchannels simultaneously according to their traffic demands, thereby increasing overall efficiency. We introduce FICA, a fine-grained channel access method that embodies this approach to media access using two novel techniques. First, it proposes a new PHY architecture based on orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) that retains orthogonality among subchannels while relying solely on the coordination mechanisms in existing WLAN, carrier sensing and broadcasting. Second, FICA employs a frequency-domain contention method that uses physical-layer Request to Send/Clear to Send (RTS/CTS) signaling and frequency domain backoff to efficiently coordinate subchannel access. We have implemented FICA, both MAC and PHY layers, using a software radio platform, and our experiments demonstrate the feasibility of the FICA design. Furthermore, our simulation results show FICA can improve the efficiency of WLANs from a few percent to 600% compared to existing 802.11.
Keywords :
OFDM modulation; access protocols; frequency-domain analysis; telecommunication signalling; wireless LAN; FICA method; MAC protocol; OFDM; PHY data rate; PHY layers; fine-grained channel access; fine-grained channel access method; frequency-domain contention method; media access control protocol; modern wireless LAN; modern wireless local area networks; orthogonal frequency division multiplexing; physical-layer RTS-CTS signaling; physical-layer data rate; physical-layer request to send-clear to send signaling; IEEE 802.11 Standards; Media Access Protocol; OFDM; Sensors; Synchronization; Wireless LAN; Cross-layer; fine-grained channel access; media access control (MAC); orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA); wireless;
Journal_Title :
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNET.2012.2212207