Abstract

The Internet-of-Things (IoT) is the paradigm where anything will be connected. There are two main approaches to handle the surge in uplink (UL) traffic that the IoT is expected to generate, namely, scheduled UL (SC-UL) and random access uplink (RA-UL) transmissions. SC-UL is perceived as a viable tool to control quality-of-service levels while entailing some overhead in the scheduling request prior to any UL transmission. On the other hand, RA-UL is a simple single-phase transmission strategy. While this obviously eliminates scheduling overheads, very little is known about the scalability of RA-UL. At this critical junction, there is a dire need to analyze the scalability of these two paradigms. To that end, this paper develops a spatiotemporal mathematical framework to analyze and assess the performance of SC-UL and RA-UL. The developed paradigm jointly utilizes stochastic geometry and queuing theory. Based on such a framework, we show that the answer to the scheduling versus random access paradox actually depends on the operational scenario. Particularly, the RA-UL scheme offers low access delays but suffers from limited scalability, i.e., cannot support a large number of IoT devices. On the other hand, SC-UL transmission is better suited for higher device intensities and traffic rates.

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