Abstract

Centralized Radio Access Network (C-RAN) has been recently proposed to increase network capacity, reduce energy consumption, and improve scalability. However, C-RAN requires an extensive modification to the current infrastructure, which results in a considerable deployment cost. In this paper, we conduct a techno-economic study to evaluate the migration cost of C-RAN, and we propose a methodology for cost and energy efficient C-RAN deployment. We exploit the concept of total cost of ownership, defined as the sum of capital and operational expenditures. We formulate a Digital Unit (DU) pool placement optimization problem as Mixed Integer Linear Programming (MILP), which minimizes the total cost of ownership. We compare the total cost of ownership of C-RAN to that of the existing infrastructure, under different deployment scenarios such as greenfield and brownfield deployment of fiber and DU pool, and different cell sizes. The results show that the optical infrastructure plays a determinant role in the migration cost of C-RAN. If greenfield fiber is assumed, the migration cost cannot be compensated in a reasonable amount of time. If brownfield fiber is assumed, the migration cost is considerably reduced, and a more feasible C-RAN deployment is achieved.

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