Abstract
As densification is the promising trend of future mobile networks, deployment of base stations (BSs) becomes increasingly difficult due to the laborious procedures in network planning; besides, unreasonable layout may lead to poor coverage performance. Hence, this paper firstly trains a propagation-model-free received signal strength (RSS) predictor based on machine learning (ML) models, and then optimizes coverage performance of BS deployment via multi-objective heuristic methods. Specifically, many practical features that affect signal propagation like geographical types and operating parameters of BS, are fed into ML models to predict RSS in a rasterized area; then based on the trained model, a well-designed multi-objective genetic algorithm (GA) is proposed to minimize the number of deployed BSs with coverage constraint. For the practical considerations of fast convergence and output-consistence, greedy algorithm with fixed initial solution and searching direction is also carried out. Moreover, the typical scenarios of incremental deployment (the mobile operator needs to deploy more BSs on the basis of the existing deployment) and BS outage compensation (one BS fails and other BSs need to adjust their configurations to fill the coverage gap), are also investigated for practical needs. Simulations show that multi-layer perceptron outperforms other ML algorithms in terms of RSS prediction with mean absolute error (MAE) yielded to 3.78 dB; and numerical results verify the convergence and availability of the proposed algorithms, which shows 18.5% gain than the real-world deployment in terms of coverage rate.
Highlights
The exponential growth of mobile data traffic brought by smart devices and mobile Internet is approaching the capacity of current network infrastructures [1]
We evaluate the performance against the actual value in terms of the mean absolute error (MAE) as follows: 1 m−1
NUMERICAL RESULTS numerical results are analyzed through the proposed network planning tool in Hangzhou, China
Summary
The exponential growth of mobile data traffic brought by smart devices and mobile Internet is approaching the capacity of current network infrastructures [1]. To address this challenge, ultra-dense network comes out as one of the leading concepts in the race to the future networks, where the basic idea is to provide a coverage environment so that users can connect to the access nodes as close as possible, i.e., base stations (BSs) are ultra-densely deployed in hotspots [2]. How to extend the wireless coverage by optimally deploying BSs while minimizing the number of BSs becomes an intractable problem in the field of BS deployment.
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