Abstract

This paper investigates how suitable TV White Space (TVWS) is for use by cellular networks. Unlike in licensed bands, transmit power in TVWS is limited and considerable interference from TV towers exists. This suggests that evaluating TVWS only in terms of available bandwidth can be misleading, since performance of wireless networks in TVWS is likely lower than in the same amount of dedicated spectrum. We quantify TVWS at the example of Germany, using the European methodology developed in CEPT ECC SE 43. In the second step, we determine the performance of a cellular network operating in TVWS using a calibrated multi-cell and multi-user system level simulation tool. This way we also consider interference between TVWS users, which in previous TVWS studies has not been investigated in detail. Not all locally available TV channels are equally useful. We thus compare different channel selection algorithms a TVWS operator could apply to select from the set of available TVWS channels. We found that while the available spectrum for TVWS usage is in theory quite high, its actual utility strongly depends on the channel selection method and the requirements it is based on. Due to the high interference from TV towers, cellular networks based on frequency re-use one (like LTE) have difficulties finding channels that allow good performance at the cell edge. The inner part of a cell can however considerably benefit from TVWS. This indicates that for cellular networks TVWS is primarily suitable for traffic offloading and spotty coverage rather than for building large contiguous coverage networks.

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