
Fair Channel Allocation Scheme for Base Station Cooperative Communication in LTE Mobile Network
Author(s) -
Manal Ismail,
Rosdiadee Nordin,
Nor Fadzilah Abdullah,
Mahamod Ismail,
Mohd Fairusham Ghazali
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal of recent technology and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2277-3878
DOI - 10.35940/ijrte.e6473.018520
Subject(s) - base station , computer network , computer science , cellular network , user equipment , channel (broadcasting) , interference (communication) , transmitter power output , enhanced data rates for gsm evolution , co channel interference , transmission (telecommunications) , telecommunications , transmitter
Unjust provision of channels by base station greatly affects Mobile subscribers. A standard cluster, would be able to serve Many User Equipments (UEs). A typical cluster would contain 3, 7 19, or 21 cells. An issue of ambiguity exist in the demarcation boundary of adjacent cells, thus, radio transmission in a cell from a particular eNode Base Station (eNBs) may leak into neighbouring cells, which causes interferences. Furthermore, the eNBs geographical location is sensitive to obstructions such as towering buildings. The absence of line of sight has a major impact on radio signals, as this would amplify the loss of propagated radio signals, leading to weaken signal strength at the transmitter, that ultimately affecting current the Fixed Channel Allocation (FCA) technique. Despite the effort for fair channel through the current mechanism, users on the edge of the cell experience unfairness. The primary cause for this can be traced to poor received signal power. There are two considered UEs clustered in this simulation scenarios, which is proposed in this paper: (i) random fixed UEs and (ii) 5 step move UEs. A combination of static and dynamic clustering is proposed, thus leading to enhanced channel allocation. From the results, there is a drastic reduction in inter-cell interference, which would increase the performance of the cellular network to become ideal.