• DocumentCode
    3603353
  • Title

    The Complexity–Rate Tradeoff of Centralized Radio Access Networks

  • Author

    Rost, Peter ; Talarico, Salvatore ; Valenti, Matthew C.

  • Author_Institution
    NEC Labs. Eur., Heidelberg, Germany
  • Volume
    14
  • Issue
    11
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    6164
  • Lastpage
    6176
  • Abstract
    In a centralized radio access network (RAN), the signals from multiple radio access points (RAPs) are centrally processed in a data center. A centralized RAN enables advanced interference coordination strategies while leveraging the elastic provisioning of data processing resources. It is particularly well suited for dense deployments, such as within a large building where the RAPs are connected via fiber and where many cells are underutilized. This paper considers the computational requirements of a centralized RAN with the goal of illuminating the benefits of pooling computational resources. A new analytical framework is proposed for quantifying the computational load associated with the centralized processing of uplink signals in the presence of block Rayleigh fading, a distance-dependent path loss, and fractional power control. Several new performance metrics are defined, including the computational outage probability, the outage complexity, the computational gain, the computational diversity, and the complexity-rate tradeoff. The validity of the analytical framework is confirmed by numerically comparing it with a simulator compliant with the 3GPP LTE standard. Using the developed metrics, it is shown that centralizing computing resources provides a higher net throughput per computational resource as compared with local processing.
  • Keywords
    3G mobile communication; Long Term Evolution; Rayleigh channels; computer centres; power control; radio access networks; radiofrequency interference; telecommunication control; telecommunication network reliability; 3GPP LTE standard; RAN; RAP; Rayleigh fading; centralized processing; data center; dense deployments; distance-dependent path loss; fractional power control; interference coordination strategies; outage probability; radio access networks; radio access point; Complexity theory; Data processing; Decoding; Measurement; Power demand; Radio access networks; Signal to noise ratio; 3GPP LTE; Computational complexity; computational diversity; computational outage; mobile networks; turbo-decoding;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1536-1276
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TWC.2015.2449321
  • Filename
    7132776