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Journal ArticleDOI

Joint scheduling and power control for wireless ad hoc networks

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TLDR
A cross-layer design framework to the multiple access problem in contention-based wireless ad hoc networks is introduced, limiting multiuser interference to increase single-hop throughput and reducing power consumption to prolong battery life.
Abstract: 
In this paper, we introduce a cross-layer design framework to the multiple access problem in contention-based wireless ad hoc networks. The motivation for this study is twofold, limiting multiuser interference to increase single-hop throughput and reducing power consumption to prolong battery life. We focus on next neighbor transmissions where nodes are required to send information packets to their respective receivers subject to a constraint on the signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio. The multiple access problem is solved via two alternating phases, namely scheduling and power control. The scheduling algorithm is essential to coordinate the transmissions of independent users in order to eliminate strong levels of interference (e.g., self-interference) that cannot be overcome by power control. On the other hand, power control is executed in a distributed fashion to determine the admissible power vector, if one exists, that can be used by the scheduled users to satisfy their single-hop transmission requirements. This is done for two types of networks, namely time-division multiple-access (TDMA) and TDMA/code-division multiple-access wireless ad hoc networks.

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Citations
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Resource Allocation and Cross Layer Control in Wireless Networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present abstract models that capture the cross-layer interaction from the physical to transport layer in wireless network architectures including cellular, ad-hoc and sensor networks as well as hybrid wireless-wireline.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cross-layer design: a survey and the road ahead

TL;DR: A definition for cross-layer design is suggested, the basic types of cross- layer design with examples drawn from the literature are discussed, and the initial proposals on howcross-layer interactions may be implemented are categorized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic power allocation and routing for time-varying wireless networks

TL;DR: A joint routing and power allocation policy is developed that stabilizes the system and provides bounded average delay guarantees whenever the input rates are within this capacity region, and is applied to an ad hoc wireless network where channel variations are due to user mobility.

Cognitive networks

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Power Control in Wireless Cellular Networks

TL;DR: This survey provides a comprehensive discussion of the models, algorithms, analysis, and methodologies in this vast and growing literature of power control in cellular networks, including optimization theory, control theory, game theory, and linear algebra.
References
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Digital Communications

Journal ArticleDOI

The capacity of wireless networks

TL;DR: When n identical randomly located nodes, each capable of transmitting at W bits per second and using a fixed range, form a wireless network, the throughput /spl lambda/(n) obtainable by each node for a randomly chosen destination is /spl Theta/(W//spl radic/(nlogn)) bits persecond under a noninterference protocol.
Journal ArticleDOI

A framework for uplink power control in cellular radio systems

TL;DR: It is shown that systems in which transmitter powers are subject to maximum power limitations share these common properties, which permit a general proof of the synchronous and totally asynchronous convergence of the iteration p(t+1)=I(p(t)) to a unique fixed point at which total transmitted power is minimized.
Journal ArticleDOI

A simple distributed autonomous power control algorithm and its convergence

TL;DR: For wireless cellular communication systems, one seeks a simple effective means of power control of signals associated with randomly dispersed users that are reusing a single channel in different cells, and the authors demonstrate exponentially fast convergence to these settings whenever power settings exist for which all users meet the rho requirement.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Topology control of multihop wireless networks using transmit power adjustment

TL;DR: This work considers the problem of adjusting the transmit powers of nodes in a multihop wireless network as a constrained optimization problem with two constraints-connectivity and biconnectivity, and one optimization objective-maximum power used.
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