A Fast Terminal Matching Method for Interference Coordination Based on Wavelet Transform and Graph Theory in Ultra-Dense Multi-Cell Scenarios

The intensive deployment of cells in a wireless communication system may significantly increase the network capacity, but it may cause more complex and severe inter-cell interference. In order to effectively coordinate the interference, terminals in different cells are matched with the purpose of av...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Junxiang Gou, Lusheng Wang, Hai Lin, Min Peng, Caihong Kai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2021-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9594836/
Description
Summary:The intensive deployment of cells in a wireless communication system may significantly increase the network capacity, but it may cause more complex and severe inter-cell interference. In order to effectively coordinate the interference, terminals in different cells are matched with the purpose of avoiding severe interference, called terminal matching, and a fast method is proposed in this article for multi-cell scenarios. By constructing a fully weighted graph of all the base stations with interferences as the weights, the minimum spanning tree method in graph theory is used to identify the coordination relationship among all the cells, and multiple coordination pairs can be obtained. For each coordination pair, terminal matching is modeled as a two-dimensional assignment problem between the coefficients after wavelet decomposition and Hungarian algorithm is applied to obtain their optimal match. Wavelet transform is used to extract the scale transformation coefficients describing the terminal features in each single cell, so that the optimization process can be accelerated because the amount of these coefficients is dramatically reduced after several layers of wavelet decomposition. The minimum Hamilton path method in graph theory is used to rank the terminals in each cell based on their key features, so that the coefficients lose as minimum useful information as possible during wavelet decomposition. Simulation results show that the performance of the proposed method reaches approximately the optimal matching obtained by traversing all the coordination possibilities among all the cells. Compared with the simulated annealing algorithm, the performance loss in terms of system spectral efficiency is only about 2%, but the proposed method requires only less than one thousandth of its computational time.
ISSN:2169-3536