Abstract

This work takes as a reference the scenario of heterogeneous radio access networks where several radio access technologies (RATs) coexist and cooperate providing a range of services over a specific coverage area. In this context, an appropriate RAT must be selected upon each user request in order to provide the specified quality of service (QoS) level for the requested service. Despite of having an efficient RAT selection mechanism, the intrinsic network dynamics may pose some risk on the QoS guarantees in each RAT which may not be met thus leading to a degraded network performance. In such situations, the network undergoes so-called radio access congestion situations. In this work, a statistical characterization of radio access congestion is provided for TDMA and WCDMA based systems. Furthermore, the impact of several representative RAT selection policies is evaluated in terms of their obtained congestion probability. Numerical results conclude that a proper knowledge of congestion information can be used as a relevant input for RAT selection specification.

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