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Academic literature on the topic 'Coordination des interférences intercellulaires'
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Coordination des interférences intercellulaires"
Ammari, Saloua. "Impact des équipements radio sur la couverture et la capacité d'un réseau UMTS." Paris 11, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA112113.
Full textThis thesis analyses the impact of residual interference of a CDMA system such as UMTS on the coverage and capacity of the network. The residual interference depends on the spreading code properties and also on the chosen receiver technique. Several complementary procedures are mounted in the system level in order to control the interference level: power control, admission control and resource allocation. The first part of the thesis is focused on the receiver techniques. Two receiver families are studied and compared in terms of performance: the correlation receivers (RAKE receiver) and the multiuser bloc linear receivers. Different approaches for performance evaluation of the receivers are analysed and compared: exact calculus, approximate calculus based either on the gaussian model of interference or approximate based on the development of the mean error probability in Taylor series and the asymptotic evaluation for systems with great spreading factors. The complexity of implementation of the receiver has also been considered. We proposed a linear bloc-sub-optimal receiver based on splitting the processing in sub blocs. The tradeoff between complexity and performances of such a receiver has been optimised. In order to evaluate the impact of the receiver choice on the other procedures mounted in the system level, the second part is focused on the analysis of the interference at the output of a RAKE receiver or a bloc linear receiver. The goodness of the gaussian model, which presents a lot of advantages, has been discussed. The interference model has been taken into consideration with different level of simplifications and introduced in some system study examples: call admission and code allocation, power allocation, and the resulting tradeoff between coverage and capacity
Tordjmann, Thierry. "Vagues calciques intercellulaires dans le foie de mammiferes : mecanismes d'orientation et de coordination." Paris 7, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA077157.
Full textYassin, Mohamad. "Inter-cell interference coordination in wireless networks." Thesis, Rennes 1, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015REN1S106/document.
Full textThe exponentially increasing demand for mobile broadband communications have led to the dense deployment of cellular networks with aggressive frequency reuse patterns. The future Fifth Generation (5G) networks are expected to overcome capacity and throughput challenges by adopting a multi-tier architecture where several low-power Base Stations (BSs) are deployed within the coverage area of the macro cell. However, Inter-Cell Interference (ICI) caused by the simultaneous usage of the same spectrum in different cells, creates severe problems. ICI reduces system throughput and network capacity, and has a negative impact on cell-edge User Equipment (UE) performance. Therefore, Inter-Cell Interference Coordination (ICIC) techniques are required to mitigate the impact of ICI on system performance. In this thesis, we address the resource and power allocation problem in multiuser Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) networks such as LTE/LTE-A networks and dense small cell networks. We start by overviewing the state-of-the-art schemes, and provide an exhaustive classification of the existing ICIC approaches. This qualitative classification is followed by a quantitative investigation of several interference mitigation techniques. Then, we formulate a centralized multi-cell joint resource and power allocation problem, and prove that this problem is separable into two independent convex optimization problems. The objective function of the formulated problem consists in maximizing system throughput while guaranteeing throughput fairness between UEs. ICI is taken into account, and resource and power allocation is managed accordingly in a centralized manner. Furthermore, we introduce a decentralized game-theoretical method to solve the power allocation problem without the need to exchange signaling messages between the different cells. We also propose a decentralized heuristic power control algorithm based on the received Channel Quality Indication (CQI) feedbacks. The intuition behind this algorithm is to avoid power wastage for UEs that are close to the serving cell, and reducing ICI for UEs in the neighboring cells. An autonomous ICIC scheme that aims at satisfying throughput demands in each cell zone is also introduced. The obtained results show that this technique improves UE throughput fairness, and it reduces the percentage of unsatisfied UEs without generating additional signaling messages. Lastly, we provide a hybrid ICIC scheme as a compromise between the centralized and the decentralized approaches. For a cluster of adjacent cells, resource and power allocation decisions are made in a collaborative manner. First, the transmission power is adjusted after receiving the necessary information from the neighboring cells. Second, resource allocation between cell zones is locally modified, according to throughput demands in each zone
Pischella, Mylène. "Allocation de ressources distribuée dans les réseaux OFDMA multi-cellulaires." Phd thesis, Télécom ParisTech, 2009. http://pastel.archives-ouvertes.fr/pastel-00004978.
Full textPischella, Mylène. "Allocation de ressources distribuée dans les réseaux OFDMA multi-cellulaires." Phd thesis, Paris, ENST, 2009. https://pastel.hal.science/pastel-00004978.
Full textThe thesis studies resource allocation methods, distributed per base station (BS) in multi-cellular OFDMA networks. The objective is to provide the Quality of Service (QoS) requested by each user, whatever its location in the cell. First, it investigates causal network coordination in distributed networks. Two BSs form a virtual Multiple Input, Multiple Output (MIMO) array for the users located at the border of cells. These users thus benefit from a diversity gain, and from inter-cell interference mitigation. The efficiency of the associated resource allocation method depends on the fairness of the power control objective. Thus, network coordination is used for Rate Constrained (RC) users, but not for Best Effort (BE) users, in a proposed algorithm that jointly manages both QoS objectives. The thesis next considers the more general perspective of fully distributed networks. For RC users, a resource allocation process with iterative interference-based power allocation is determined to solve the Margin Adaptive problem. It includes a distributed constraint that guarantees power control convergence. The proposed method is extended to RC users in MIMO, both when full Channel State Information is available at transmission, and when only the statistical properties of the channel are available at transmission. Finally, for BE users, the objective is to maximize the weighted sum throughput, where the weight of each user is proportional to its queue length. A subcarrier allocation method, deduced from a network-wide interference graph, and a distributed power control method are proposed for that optimization problem
Adouane, Amine Mohamed. "Dynamic management of spectral resources in LTE networks." Thesis, Versailles-St Quentin en Yvelines, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015VERS007V/document.
Full textThe exponential growth in the number of communications devices has set out new ambitious targets to meet the ever-increasing demand for user capacity in emerging wireless systems. However, the inherent impairments of communication channels in cellular systems pose constant challenges to meet the envisioned targets. High spectral reuse efficiency was adopted as a solution to higher data rates. Despite its benefits, high spectral reuse leads to increased interference over the network, which degrades performances of mobile users with bad channel quality. To face this added interfence, OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) is used for the new 4th generation network. Thanks to its orthogonality OFDM eliminates the intra-cellular interference, but when the same resources are used in two adjacents cells, the inter-cell interference becomes severe. To get rid of the latter, several methods for Inter-Cell Interference Coordination (ICIC) have been proposed. ICIC allows coordinated radio resources management between multiple cells. The eNodeBs can share resource usage information and interference levels over the X2 interface through LTE-normalized messages. Non-cooperative game theory was largely applied were eNodeBs selfishly selects resource blocks (RBs) in order to minimize interference. In this thesis, we stress on ICIC for the downlink of a cellular OFDMA system in the context of the SOAPS (Spectrum Opportunistic Access in Public Safety) project. This project focuses on the improvement of frequency resource scheduling for Broadband Services provision by PMR (Private Mobile Radio) systems using LTE technologies. We addressed this problem with four different solutions based on Non-cooperative game theory, three algorithms are devoted to RB selection in order to manage the interference, while the last one is a power control scheme with power economy and enhanced system performances