Abstract

Part one of this paper analyzes the effects of data traffic integration into a CDMA cellular voice system. The figure of merit used for the quality of service seen by the voice users is measured by the probability of blocking. The CDMA system under consideration is a power controlled, cellular architecture in which blocking occurs when the total interference level exceeds the background noise level by 10 dB [1]. It is shown that the introduction of data can be done at little or no increase in the probability of blocking on the voice users. In part two we propose and analyze a protocol which achieves the efficient integration of data by maximizing the utilization of the resources and minimizing the delay experienced by the voice users. The proposed protocol admits data traffic into the CDMA cellular system based on the current aggregate voice interference level, and allows for the efficient integration of voice and data without degrading the quality of service for the delay-critical voice traffic.A Markovian model for this protocol is developed, evaluated and compared to computer simulation results.

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