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Dipankar RAYCHAUDHURI Akash BAID
This paper presents the design and proof-of-concept validation of a novel network-assisted spectrum coordination (NASCOR) service for improved radio coexistence in future shared spectrum bands. The basic idea is to create an overlay network service for dissemination of spectrum usage information between otherwise independent radio devices and systems, enabling them to implement decentralized spectrum coexistence policies that reduce interference and improve spectrum packing efficiency. The proposed method is applicable to unlicensed band and shared spectrum systems in general (including femtocells), but is particularly relevant to emerging TV white spaces and cognitive radio systems which are still in need of scalable and accurate solutions for both primary-to-secondary and secondary-to-secondary coordination. Key challenges in enabling a network layer spectrum coordination service are discussed along with the description of our system architecture and a detailed case-study for a specific example of spectrum coordination: client-AP association optimization in dense networks. Performance gains are evaluated through large-scale simulations with multiple overlapping networks, each consisting of 15-35 access points and 50-250 clients in a 0.5×0.5 sq.km. urban setting. Results show an average of 150% improvement in random deployments and upto 7× improvements in clustered deployments for the least-performing client throughputs with modest reductions in the mean client throughputs.
This position paper outlines the author's view on architectural directions and key technology enablers for the future mobile Internet. It is pointed out that mobile and wireless services will dominate Internet usage in the near future, and it is therefore important to design next-generation network protocols with features suitable for efficiently serving emerging wireless scenarios and applications. Several key requirements for mobile/wireless scenarios are identified - these include new capabilities such as dynamic spectrum coordination, cross-layer support, disconnection tolerant routing, content addressing, and location awareness. Specific examples of enabling technologies which address some of these requirements are given from ongoing research projects at WINLAB. Topics covered briefly include wireless network virtualization, the cache-and-forward (CNF) protocol, geographic (GEO) protocol stack, cognitive radio protocols, and open networking testbeds.