Abstract

We consider future cellular networks and study the coexistence of delay-sensitive (DS) and delay-tolerant (DT) devices in machine-type communication (MTC). DS devices require to minimize access delay for their low delay requirements; in contrast, DT devices have flexible delay constraints. For reducing access delay, we extend fast retrial idea in the data transmissions when a group of preambles is divided into two subsets to support the time-varying nature of the traffic from DS devices. We focus on the stability dynamics by design—we derive convergence conditions by using a control-theoretic approach in terms of variation in the 1) arrival rates; 2) buffer sizing at the devices; 3) number of preambles; and 4) number of DS devices. More importantly, we discover a novel adaptive algorithm that dynamically allocates the number of preambles for DS, thus guaranteeing stability by design. We validate our findings with extensive simulations. Besides, we develop a novel framework that describes how the control theory idea can be applied to address the issue of tracking the buffers and handling coexistence in such a diverse network environment under realistic application constraints. Our extension to the control-theoretic idea predicts whether the overall system is stable, i.e., whether data flows are desynchronized. Given the data flows are desynchronized, small buffers are always sufficient. Our approach shows that a smaller DS buffer often promotes desynchronization—a virtuous cycle.

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