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Cross-Layer Schemes for Antenna Array Based Wireless Ad Hoc Networks – Design and Analysis

Cross-Layer Schemes for Antenna Array Based Wireless Ad Hoc Networks – Design and Analysis. Jayakrishnan Mundarath Jointly Advised by : Prof. Parmesh Ramanathan Prof. Barry Van Veen Preliminary Examination Talk. Outline. Introduction – Ad Hoc networks and MIMO

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Cross-Layer Schemes for Antenna Array Based Wireless Ad Hoc Networks – Design and Analysis

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  1. Cross-Layer Schemes for Antenna Array Based Wireless Ad Hoc Networks – Design and Analysis Jayakrishnan Mundarath Jointly Advised by : Prof. Parmesh Ramanathan Prof. Barry Van Veen Preliminary Examination Talk

  2. Outline • Introduction – Ad Hoc networks and MIMO • Design & Analysis Perspective • Research Proposal – Unified Analysis Model • Conclusion

  3. Wireless Ad Hoc Networks • No infrastructure support • Nodes may rely on other nodes to forward packets on their behalf • Example: IEEE 802.11 • Wide range of applications • Need higher bandwidths at lower energy expense

  4. Popular Standard - IEEE 802.11 • RTS-CTS-DATA-ACK framework • Single antenna – Single Spatial Reuse • When node A is communicating with node B all nodes in the neighborhood of A and B must remain idle • Limits aggregate network throughput D DATA E B RTS ACK CTS A C F G

  5. Multi-Antenna Systems (MIMO) • Each node has N > 1 antenna • Can “beamform” transmissions (favorably or unfavorably) towards receivers • Can spatially multiplex multiple data streams • Can exploit array gain to lower energy consumption • Solution for ad hoc networks? A B C D

  6. Outline • Introduction – Ad Hoc networks and MIMO • Design & Analysis Perspective • Research Proposal – Unified Analysis Model • Conclusion

  7. Preliminary Work • NULLHOC – MAC/PHY protocol that increases spatial reuse using nulling (IEEE Globecom’04, revision submitted to ACM Journal of Wireless Networks (WINET)) • HYB – MAC/PHY protocol that exploits both spatial reuse and multiplexing (submitted to IEEE Trans. on Wireless Comm.) • QSAP – Allocates spatial reuse to satisfy QoS (submitted to IEEE/ACM Trans. on Networking) • DTNS Model – Markov chain model to predict protocol performance (submitted to IEEE/ACM Trans. on Networking)

  8. Discrete Time Network State (DTNS) Model • Goal • Analytical characterization of effects of cross-layer designs on performance of multi-antenna wireless ad hoc networks • Accomplished • Cross-layer analytical model to assess network throughput for a class of ad hoc networks • Future direction • Application to a wider class of networks • Exploring wider range of performance metrics, e.g., energy consumption, Quality of Service (QoS).

  9. HYB – An illustrative example for DTNS • Spatial reuse + spatial multiplexing • Orthogonal control and data channels (CC and DC) • Single spatial reuse control channel • Multiple spatial reuse data channel A B DATA CONTROL C D DATA CONTROL D E DATA DC CC

  10. HYB : Network Evolution Time 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Data Control

  11. DTNS Considerations • Medium Access Framework : RTS-CTS-DATA-ACK • Channel knowledge at transmitter and receiver assumed (e.g. using two-way pilot sequence exchange) • Orthogonal Control and Data channels • Proportion of bandwidth assigned to CC = α

  12. DTNS Specifics (1) • Maximum spatial reuse dr • Maximum spatial multiplexing dm • Maximum EDB = kmax,α dm (1- α) • kmax,α = maximum spatial reuse achievable with CC bandwidth α • kmax,α =

  13. DTNS Specifics (2) • Actual EDB < Maximum EDB due to • MAC effects – e.g. collisions • Physical layer effects – e.g. transmit power, poor SNR • Possibly network/higher layer effects – packet availability, QoS constraints etc. • To obtain actual EDB, model network time evolution using Markov chain • Given dr choose optimal αopt as solution to: Then discretize time with one time slot = one control length

  14. (3,2) (3,2) (3,2) (3,2) (3,1) (2,2) (2,2) (2,2) (2,1) (2,2) (1,1) (1,2) (1,2) (1,2) (1,2) (3,2) (2,2) (1,2) (0,0) (0,0) (0,0) DTNS : Network Evolution Model Time 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Data Control

  15. (3,2) (3,2) (3,1) (3,2) (3,2) (2,1) (2,2) (2,2) (2,2) (2,2) (1,2) (1,2) (1,2) (1,2) (1,1) (3,2) (2,2) (1,2) (0,0) (0,0) (0,0) DTNS : Network State Representation Time 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Data Control (0,0) (0,0) (0,0) (3,2) (0,0) (0,0) (3,2) (2,2) (0,0) (3,2) (2,2) (1,2) (3,1) (2,2) (1,2) (3,2) (2,1) (1,2) (2,2) (1,1) (0,0) (3,2) (1,2) (0,0) (3,2) (2,2) (0,0)

  16. (0,0) (1,2) (2,2) (1,2) (2,2) (3,2) (2,1) (0,0) (1,2) DTNS Markov Chain • Transition probabilities derived from model of • Channel statistics and physical layer scheme • Bound on transmit power of each node • MAC constraints such as collision • Can accommodate other constraints

  17. DTNS : Network Analysis • Network EDB given by • kav(1-α) • kav is the average number of streams – obtained from steady state analysis of the DTNS Markov chain • Changing constraints amounts to modifying the transition probabilities

  18. Ex.1 : Spatial Multiplexing on Eigen channels : MRATE • N antennas – transmit up to N data streams • Simple extension to IEEE 802.11 • RTS-CTS used for channel estimation • Inverse water filling – allocate available power among spatial channels to achieve equal SNR • Fill from best to worst • DTNS chain has N states • Rayleigh flat-fading channel model

  19. Ex.1 : Spatial Multiplexing on Eigen channels • MRATE – Results with adjusted back-offs • N = 8 • Different total available transmit powers

  20. Ex.2 : HYB – Hybrid Protocol • N antennas – allocated for spatial reuse and spatial multiplexing • Maximum spatial reuse dr and maximum spatial multiplexing dm such that dm dr < N • Rayleigh flat fading channels used

  21. Ex.2 : HYB – Hybrid Protocol dm = 1, dr = 8 dm = 2, dr = 4

  22. Ex.2 : HYB – Hybrid Protocol dm = 4, dr = 2 dm = 8, dr = 1

  23. Ex.2 : HYB – Results • Model captures trends accurately • Discrepancies in absolute value a consequence of some specific characteristics of the protocol • Sequence of different control messages have consequence on protocol performance • A coarse model for such effects accounts for ~70-80% of the discrepancies • Not included here since it requires elaborate description of HYB

  24. Outline • Introduction – Ad Hoc networks and MIMO • Design & Analysis Perspective • Research Proposal – Unified Analysis Model • Conclusion

  25. Research Proposal • Multi-rate capable ad hoc networks – e.g IEEE 802.11a/b • Different rate adaptation strategies • Optimal MAC? • Multi-hop topology – can DTNS model performance in multi-hop topologies? • Quality of Service (QoS) – increasingly important in next generation ad hoc networks – best strategy?

  26. P1 : Multi-rate protocols • IEEE 802.11a/b – supports transmissions at multiple rates • Strategies for rate adaptation exist in literature and practice • First goal is to assess schemes with practical physical layer models • Model network as Markov chain – transitions depend on • Channel model and physical layer scheme • Access strategy • State representation and exact nature of transitions? • Second goal is to analytically design an efficient rate adaptation strategy • Is there an optimal rate adaptation strategy for a given channel model? • What is “optimal” in this context?

  27. P2 : DTNS Model for Distributed Topology • Current DTNS models single hop topology • Multi-hop topology is more challenging • Performance metric –throughput per node • Use flow contention graph to represent topology • State representation – requires investigation • Generalize to statistical topology models

  28. P3 : QoS in Ad Hoc Networks • QoS increasingly important in Ad Hoc Networks • Analytical model for QoS in MIMO networks can • Provide insights for more efficient resource allocation • Enable to take cross-layer effects into account • Possible approaches • Represent network state at time k of N nodes as a N-vector of deviations • Vector u(k) represents allocation strategy at time k • Model cost function and derive optimal “strategy” to • Minimize deviations • Drive deviations to desired value

  29. Outline • Introduction – Ad Hoc networks and MIMO • Design & Analysis Perspective • Research Proposal – Unified Analysis Model • Conclusion

  30. Conclusion • Analytical models important for next generation ad hoc networks • Research aims at achieving • Deeper insights into performance limitations • Identifying effects of cross-layer interactions • Identifying optimal provisioning strategies • Finding efficient designs

  31. Thank you

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