Abstract

Electromagnetic spectrum is a scarce resource. Spectrum licensing is estimated to consume about 20% of cellular operators' capital expenditure (CAPEX). One important measure of spectrum use is “spectral efficiency” (SE), which is the amount of data bandwidth that a specific technology can extract from a certain amount of radio spectrum and is measured in bits per second per Hz (bps/Hz). Using data from 4 different mobile operators, we show that spectral efficiency as the measure of bits per second per Hz correlates poorly with users' performance on cellular networks. Applying spectral efficiency directly in network performance monitoring or in network planning can provide misleading diagnostics and poorly targeted expansion plans. We propose a new spectral efficiency metric that combines the raw bit per second per Hz measurement with user perceived performance. We show that this new metric correlates well with measured user throughput and is superior metric for network planning and performance monitoring in real networks. We present a number of applications of our new metric on network management and capacity planning tasks. Our implementation of this approach has been used in operational networks for over 8 years and has provided sound basis for CAPEX decision making.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

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