Interference Mitigation Technique for Downlink Cellular Network by Advanced Receiver and Scheduling Mechanism

DOI : 10.17577/IJERTV7IS020177

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  • Authors : Hetal Anubhai Chalaliya , Prof. Nita. T. Dave , Prof. Sarosh Dastur
  • Paper ID : IJERTV7IS020177
  • Volume & Issue : Volume 07, Issue 02 (February 2018)
  • DOI : http://dx.doi.org/10.17577/IJERTV7IS020177
  • Published (First Online): 03-03-2018
  • ISSN (Online) : 2278-0181
  • Publisher Name : IJERT
  • License: Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

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Interference Mitigation Technique for Downlink Cellular Network by Advanced Receiver and Scheduling Mechanism

Hetal A. Chalaliya

PG Student

Department of Electronics and Communication

Dr. S. & S.S. Gandhy Government Engineering College, Surat

Prof. Nita T. Dave

Ass. Professor

Department of Electronics and Communication Dr. S. & S.S. Gandhy Government Engineering College,

Surat

Prof. Sarosh K. Dastoor

Ass. Professor

Department of Electronics and Communication Sarvajanik college of engineering and technology

Abstract: Deployment of 5G cellular networks consists of small cells like picocell, Femtocell and Macro cell in dense HETNET scenario. Interference mitigation is one of the parameter to be considered for reliable communication services. There is interference between femto femto, femto-macro and macro- macro. In this paper, we address the problem of interference in downlink cellular networks where cell edge users may suffer from high interference. Here we describe an approach that mitigates the interference with the use of advanced receiver combined with scheduling mechanism for cell assignment. The duty of joint scheduling mechanism is to determine serving User Equipments (UE) and Channel State Information (CSI) jointly which includes transmission schemes and modulation. Based on this information cell assignment procedure will occur. Joint scheduling mechanism can be implemented using specific scheme. Advanced receiver will use this CSI and suppress or cancel interference experience in downlink cellular network. Improvement in SINR and throughput has been obtained by 5 to 10% using given approach.

Keywords: Interference, Advanced Receiver, Scheduling Mechanism.

  1. INTRODUCTION

    Over a last few decades, there is massive increment in the user demand for high data-rates in cellular communication. To meet this demands, effective improvement require in heterogeneous network architecture for mobile communication. The 5G network will use heterogeneous characteristics and capacities like macro cell, pico cell, femto cell, Radio Relay Heads (RRH) etc. In addition to densification of electronic gadgets requires efficient interference alignment and resource usage methods in order to increase the data rates. By deploying large number of small cell in heterogeneous network the capacity will significantly increase. However, deployment of HetNets faces number of challenges amongst which interference management is biggest concern [1].

    In [1] author describes different techniques to mitigate interference at the network side as well as at the receiver

    sides. At network side, joint scheduling mechanism is applied. In which UE are not always served by the strongest perceived cell. The method will useful in load balancing and also improve performance. A Network-Assisted Interference Cancellation and Suppression (NAICS) receiver can be used for interference mitigation at receiver side. In [2] author describes benefits UE side approach while using the network information theory. Network-side interference mitigation needs to be harmonized with receiver side interference mitigation for performance improvement. If joint scheduling elaborated with advance receivers then it will be beneficial in interference management [3]. Distributed resource allocation algorithm which is describes in [4] will first identify impotent users, and then protects that users by assigning resources. Inter-cell interference coordination (ICIC) information is transmitted to neighbouring base stations via the X2 interface [4]. A network upgrade with small cell deployments is simulated in a realistic metropolitan scenario to satisfy the traffic growth forecast over a period of ten years. Simulator is used to model the network behaviour of IRC receiver. The deployment time, scale and cost of the small cells improved by interference mitigation solutions are presented. The simulation results show that small cell deployments are the one of the way to increase the system capacity [6]. In recent standards, interference mitigation technologies, like the linear interference rejection combining (IRC) receiver and Enhanced Inter-Cell Interference Coordination (eICIC), are introduced to address the co-channel interference between macro and small cells in downlink. In mobile network wireless communications, Network side interference significantly reduces using co-ordinated scheduling Thus, for overall performance enhancement coordination among multiple cell require [7].The Resource Allocation Algorithm maximize the throughput of network. Cuckoo search Algorithm is applied for the problem of resource optimization allocating the suitable power and bandwidth. This resource allocation leads to reduction in cross-tier interference small cell networks [8]. The virtual layer based

    algorithm detect interference situation in the network and based on that information power control and optimization take place which leads to autonomous interference minimization [9].

    There is not any interference management strategies were considered in previous LTE standard like release 8 and 9 not even receiver technologies because of an implementation issue. However, It is very beneficial to mitigate interference at the UE-side in co-ordination with the network-side interference management. Here we deal with two aspects for interference mitigation. One is network side with the help of centralised joint scheduling mechanism for cell assignment and other at user equipment (UE) side by use of advanced receiver.

    Interference experienced by the users can be reduced by use of centralised scheduling mechanism. It also helps in load balancing in resource usage. To analyse Network side Interference one can use BB pool mechanism [2]. Similarly, for UE side Interference Suppression (IS) and Interference Cancellation (IC) are two advanced receiver that are used. Interfering signals can be detected and cancelled non- linearly using advanced receiver. The interference reduction that advanced receivers can achieve is strongly influenced by the transmission rate, as well as the rank [3].

    Rest of the paper is organised as follow: Section II presents proposed technique with centralised scheduling and advanced receiver; Section III describe the network scenario and the signal model; Section IV describes simulation analysis and results; Section V presents the conclusion of paper.

  2. DESCRIBED ALGORITHM

    1. Joint scheduling mechanism

      =1

      Joint scheduling is used at network-side for interference management in cellular systems, in which the transmission rates and coding schemes of cells in cluster are determined jointly. The transmission schemes of multiple nodes and serving UE are determined by joint scheduling mechanism. Centralised and distributed are two different techniques to implement joint scheduling. In centralized joint scheduling, all the information related to the user or channel is gathered and sent to the central controller; Scheduling decision was send to each node after performing calculations by central controller. But centralized schemes increases burden on backhaul processing communication and increases delay in decision. In case of distributed manner each nodes does its

      interference due to densification of network. The interference is basically a desired signal of neighbouring cell so it is different form noise in its statistical and physical characteristics. Interference signals are nothing but the useful signal of another base station or UE. It means that interference signals similar to the desired signal in terms of moduation scheme and structure of signal. Previously there was no practical way to handle interference and hence it was treated as part of noise. This handling of interference is improper which leads in Performance loss. Proper interference management requires for performance improvement.

      Interference Management by an advanced receiver means that the receiver has the capability to take advantage of the structure of the interference signals, including constellation, coding scheme, channel modulation, and resource allocation. Architecture of advanced receiver helps to improve the performance of desired signal decoding. The application of advanced receivers is not useful in inter-cell interference mitigation of the cell edge user but also helps in intra-cell interference. Network Assisted Interference Cancellation and Suppression (NAICS) support this kind of advanced receivers. Interference Suppression (IS) and Interference Cancellation (IC) are two major group of advanced receiver for interference management. Interference can be mitigated linearly without true decoding with the help of IS and IC receivers like Minimum Mean Square Error and Interference Rejection Combining (MMSE & IRC) receiver. These receivers successively detect and cancel the interfering signal in a non-linear way. The interference reduction that advanced receivers can achieve is effected by the transmission rate, as well as the rank, at the serving and interfering cells. This study makes use of two types of advanced receivers, MMSE and IRC.

  3. SYSTEM MODEL

    A network with C cell and U users is assumed for Joint Cell Assignment and Scheduling Algorithm. U users will provide their Channel State Information to their related cells, which are used by the central control unit to construct a U×C matrix M . Each element of Matrix M is represented as muc. Here U is number of user, but treated as a constant for computational simplicity. The central control unit assign cell to each user by maximizing the sum of the metrics. Here constraint is that that each cell serves at most one user per Transmission Time Interval (TTI).

    Mathematically, It is represented as,

    own calculation and exchanges summarized information with the other nodes. The advantage of distributed manner is

    Arg max

    =1

    ………………………………..(1)

    that sometimes it is iterative and the performance improves with the number of iterations, but simultaneously it suffers

    s.t.

    =1

    =1

    1 ,

    1,

    delay.

    1. Advanced receiver

    Conventionally receivers assume as a noise-limited operational device. Maximum-Likelihood (ML) and Zero- Forcing (ZF) or Minimum Mean square Error Equalization (MMSE) receiver are some of example which is designed on optimal approach. In reality user always experience

    buc {0,1} ……………………………………………(2)

    Where, muc 0 is the scheduling metric element and buc is a binary variable that equals to 1 for cell assignment and 0 otherwise. The cell assignment problem has been solved iteratively by applying following steps [1].

    Step-1: search for the largest user metric muc. Step-2: set that largest muc equals to zero.

    Step-3: The process is repeated, until all cells are occupied

    or assigned to users

    We can identify which user will serve by which cell. Link adaptation parameters (i.e., modulation and coding scheme, rank, etc.) is being determined by each cell individually for its assigned user, based on the most recently received CSI report.

    In this section, we describe advanced Minimum Mean-Square Error (MMSE) and Interference Rejection

    Combiner (IRC) receivers. For downlink network received signal can be expressed as

    Where, R(I+N) is the interference and noise covariance matrix. Because the CRS sequence of the serving cell is known at the receiver, the interference and noise covariance matrix can be estimated as

    + = [(, )(, )]…………………………………(11) Where (k, l) expressed as

    (, ) = (, ) 0(, )(, )………………………(12) The output SINR of IRC is calculated as

    00

    =

    0

    ……………….(13)

    (+2 )

    X=

    + =1

    +

    …………………………..(3)

    0 0 =1

    Where, the covariance matrix of ICI is expressed as in

    Here S0 is desired signal which is sent to the UE and H0 is propagation channel.Sq and Hq (q = 1, 2, , q – 1) are q interfering signals and their corresponding channels and N is an additive white noise vector.

    1. MMSE Receiver: The MMSE receiver considers interference as a noise vector. The channel matrix for the desired signal, only interference-plus-noise power must be estimated by the MMSE receiver. The MMSE receiver can be expressed as

      0=WMMSE X…………………………………………………….(4)

      The weight matrix of MMSE can be defined as follow: WMMSE=(0 + (2 + 2))-1 ……………………..(5)

      MMSE.

  4. SIMULATION METHODOLOGY AND RESULTS

    0 0

    Where, 2 is interference power of other cells, and 2 is the

    Fig 1: Network model for interference mitigation

    noise power. Receiver already has knowledge about Cell Specific Reference Signal (CRS), so the interference and noise power can be estimated as

    2 + 2 = (, ) 0(, )(, )……………………..(6) Here, r(k,l) is the CRS sequence of the serving cell. The output SINR of MMSE receiver is calculated as,

    00

    The described method is evaluated for a 2-tier heterogeneous network. The sectors of three adjacent macro- cells have been considered. A hexagonal 3-sector side grid has base stations which are separated by the inter-site-distance (ISD). An outdoor picocell is placed close to the cell-edge of one of the macro eNodeBs at a distance equal to 0.8*cell

    radius(R) to serve as a hotspot. The three adjacent sectors

    0

    …………………….(7)

    from different cell sites and the picocell determine the

    (+2 )

    Where, P0 represent the tx power of the interfering cell. The covariance matrix of ICI is represented by

    = 1 …………………………………………..(8)

    Where, Pc is the transmission power of the interfering cell

    1. IRC Receiver: The IRC receiver is more efficient then MMSE receiver in strong interference scenarios. The IRC receiver can be expressed as

    =WIRC X…………………………………………………………..(9)

    The IRC weight matrix is obtained by

    = (0 + +)-1 ……………………………(10)

    coordination zone. These adjacent sectors are spaced close to each other, and therefore, high interference can be expected. Interference from other neighbouring stations is significantly smaller, yet not negligible. Thus, the basic macro eNodeB block is surrounded by nine additional base stations which build an interference belt around the considered area. These stations cause uncontrollable interference to the users within the coordination zone. This interference is treated as noise. Users are uniformly distributed over the coordination zone. Inside the picocell, additional users are distributed to account for the fact that it serves as a hotspot. In both cases, the number of users depends on the load. Users arrive according to a Poisson process and have deterministic service time.

    0 0

    Table 1: Simulation Parameters of system model

    Sr. No

    Parameter

    Value

    1

    Cell structure

    Hexagonal grid, 2-tier, 19 cell sites, 3 sectors per site

    2

    Type of Network

    Heterogeneous network

    3

    No. of UEs per sector

    50 UEs

    4

    Antenna configuration

    BS: 4, MS: 4

    5

    Channel model

    WINNER channel models

    6

    User distribution

    Poisson process

    7

    Doppler velocity

    300 Hz

    8

    UE max TX power

    23 dBm

    9

    Center frequency

    2.6 GHz

    10

    Bandwidth (no. of RBs)

    20 MHz (100 RBs)

    11

    Channel estimation

    Ideal

    12

    Scheduling

    Joint scheduling

    13

    Traffic model

    Full buffer

    14

    BS antenna gain plus cable

    loss 14 dBi for micro, macro cell case

    15

    Path loss model

    PL = 130.5 + 37.6log10 (R)

    16

    Shadow std. deviation

    10 dB

    17

    Penetration loss

    20 dB

    18

    MS noise level

    174 dBm/Hz

    19

    UE noise figure

    9 dB

    20

    Correlation distance of shadowing

    50 m

    21

    Minimum distance between UE and cell C

    35 m

    22

    Advanced receiver

    Conventional receiver

    MMSE, IRC

    Table 1 summarizes simulation parameters with its values and table 2 summarizes Interpretation of symbols. Figure 2 shows cell assignment of user achieved by joint scheduling mechanism. Fig 3 and fig 4 presents the 5th and 50th percentile throughputs as separate line for distributed and centralised cases. The described centralised solution provides significant gains for data-rates between 13% and 63%. The Interference cancellation efficiency values that the NAICS receiver achieves are presented in fig 6. From graph we can see that value of IC efficiency is increased with offered load, similarly for DI-SINR in fig 5. We can see how the Low observed SINR values Match with fig 6 results.

    Sr. No

    Symbol

    Interpretation

    1

    U

    No. of users

    2

    C

    No. of cell

    3

    M

    U×C Matrix

    4

    muc

    Element of M

    5

    X

    Received signal

    6

    Receiver Matrix

    7

    S0

    Desired signal to UE

    8

    H0

    Propagation channel

    9

    q

    Interfering Signal

    10

    N

    White noise vector

    11

    WMMSE

    Weight matrix of MMSE receiver

    12

    WIRC

    Weight matrix of IRC receiver

    13

    P0

    Transmission receiver

    14

    Interference power of other cell

    15

    Noise power

    16

    r(k, l)

    Cell Reference Signal

    17

    Modified received signal

    TABLE 2: SYMBOLS AND THEIR INTERPRETATION

    Advanced receiver

    UE throughput (Mbps/user)

    Average UE spectral

    efficiency (bps/Hz/user)

    MMSE

    1.159

    0.071

    IRC

    1.209

    0.073

    ML

    4.299

    0.172

    SIC

    3.105

    0.124

    Fig 2: Cell assignment of user by joint scheduling mechanism Table 3: Average throughput and spectral efficiency of different receiver

    Fig 3:5th percentile of user throughput for distributed and centralised scheduling with IRC receiver.

    Fig 5: Dominant Interference SINR for centralised and distributed scheduling algorithm with NAICS receiver

    Fig 7: Average UE throughput for different types of receiver.

    Fig 4 :50th percentile of user throughput for distributed and centralised scheduling with IRC receiver

    Fig 6: Interference Cancellation efficiency for centralised and distributed scheduling algorithm with NAICS receiver.

    Fig 8: Average UE spectral efficiency for different types of receiver

    Fig 9: Average UE SINR for different types of receiver.

    Figure 9 shows that average UE SINR for MMSE, IRC, ML and SIC receivers. We observe that MMSE and IRC receiver increases the SINR value compare to other conventional receivers. Whereas figure 7 and figure 8 show improvement in the performance of receiver in the form of throughput and spectral efficiency. Table 3 summarise the performance of receivers in terms of SINR, throughput and spectral efficiency.

  5. CONCLUSION

In this paper, we analysed technique to suppress and cancel interference from neighbouring cells at the network and UE side. Advance receiver take advantage of interfering signal structure as they are desire signal for other cell and can successfully detect, decode and suppress or cancel the signal. MMSE and IRC receivers are used to suppress and cancels the interference, not only suppress and cancel interference but also improve capacity of network and data rates. From graph we can say that IRC receiver have better performance than MMSE. The simulation results show that the advanced receiver achieves higher SINR (10%-15%), throughput (4%-10%), and spectral efficiency than those of conventional receivers.

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