Abstract

AbstractIn the recent technical literature on cellular networks Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) has received a large attention as a promising radio interface access technique. Many studies. are devoted to the capacity evaluation of the radio interface adopting CDMA, but seemingly none of them accounts for the variability of the user spatial density due to user mobility. This should be a concern especially in a microcellular environment, where it cannot be relied upon a significant spatial average over the radio coverage area of a Base Station. The major aim of this work is a preliminary assessment of the effects of “bursty” user mobility on the capacity of the CDMA radio interface. To this end. we introduce a user mobility model apt to describe large fluctuations of the number of users in a radio cell area. A reference model of a CDMA network is used to evaluate the effects of user mobility on the capacity for a wide range of the model parameters, by means of simulations accounting for shadowing, call attempt process, voice activity and antenna directivity and assuming perfect power control. We show that user mobility can remarkably affect the CDMA capacity, mainly because of the resulting highly bursty behaviour of self‐noise. A simple traffic control scheme is devised to increase the capacity of the CDMA network, under a joint constraint on link availability, call blocking and call dropping probabilities. It is pointed out that the concepts introduced in this paper are independent of the specific CDMA implementation, i.e. they hold for any asynchronous CDMA based cellular network.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call