4.7 Article

Joint Spatial-Propagation Modeling of Cellular Networks Based on the Directional Radii of Poisson Voronoi Cells

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages 3240-3253

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TWC.2020.3048646

Keywords

Shadow mapping; Analytical models; Shape; Propagation losses; Correlation; Cellular networks; Wireless communication; Poisson Voronoi tessellations; directional radius; cellular networks; correlated shadowing; meta distribution

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [2007498]
  2. Division of Computing and Communication Foundations
  3. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [2007498] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study introduces and analyzes a joint spatial-propagation model that considers the correlation between cell radii and large-scale signal propagation, demonstrating its practical importance in network performance analysis.
In coverage-oriented networks, base stations (BSs) are deployed in a way such that users at the cell boundaries achieve sufficient signal strength. The shape and size of cells vary from BS to BS, since the large-scale signal propagation conditions differ in different geographical regions. This work proposes and studies a joint spatial-propagation (JSP) model, which considers the correlation between cell radii and the large-scale signal propagation (captured by shadowing). We first introduce the notion of the directional radius of Voronoi cells, which has applications in cellular networks and beyond. The directional radius of a cell is defined as the distance from the nucleus to the cell boundary at an angle relative to the direction of a uniformly random location in the cell. We study the distribution of the radii in two types of cells in the Poisson Voronoi tessellations: the zero-cell, which contains the origin, and the typical cell. The results are applied to analyze the JSP model. We show that, even though the Poisson point process (PPP) is often considered as a pessimistic spatial model for BS locations, the JSP model with the PPP achieves coverage performance close to the most optimistic one-the standard triangular lattice model. Further, we show that the network performance depends critically on the variance of the large-scale path loss along the cell boundary.

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