Abstract

Traffic offloading and resource sharing are two common methods for delivering cellular data traffic over unlicensed bands. In this paper, we first develop a hybrid method to take full advantages of both traffic offloading and resource sharing methods, where cellular base stations (BSs) offload traffic to WiFi networks and simultaneously occupy certain number of time slots on unlicensed bands. Then, we analytically compare the cellular throughput of the three methods with the guarantee of WiFi per-user throughput in the single-BS scenario. We find that traffic offloading can achieve better performance than resource sharing when existing WiFi user number is below a threshold and the hybrid method achieves the same performance as the resource sharing method when existing WiFi user number is large enough. In the multi-BS scenario where the coverage of small cells and WiFi access points are mutually overlapped, we consider to maximize the minimum average per-user throughput of each small cell and derive a closed-form expression for the throughput upper bound in each method. Meanwhile, practical traffic offloading and resource sharing algorithms are also developed for the three methods, respectively. Numerical results validate our theoretical analysis and demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithms as well.

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