4.7 Article

Fair Licensed Spectrum Sharing Between Two MNOs Using Resource Optimization in Multi-Cell Multi-User MIMO Networks

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 21, Issue 8, Pages 6714-6730

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TWC.2022.3152229

Keywords

Wireless communication; Resource management; MIMO communication; Optimization; Games; Quality of service; Costs; Spectrum sharing; resource allocation; user scheduling; coordinated beamforming; fairness; MIMO

Funding

  1. TELUS Canada
  2. National Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)

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This paper investigates the use of multi-user multiple-input, multiple-output (MIMO) techniques to enable licensed spectrum sharing in multi-cell multi-user MIMO networks. It presents a fair spectrum sharing system between two mobile network operators (MNOs) and proposes an algorithm to solve the non-convex optimization problem. The results show that the proposed scheme can improve user rate and prevent MNO exploitation, especially for cell-center users.
Licensed spectrum sharing has been a promised approach to provide mobile network operators (MNOs) with required spectrum at times of increased traffic, or to improve the mobile user data rate with limited spectral resources. In this paper, we investigate the use of multi-user multiple-input, multiple-output (MIMO) techniques to enable licensed spectrum sharing. Specifically, we present a fair spectrum sharing system between two MNOs in multi-cell multi-user MIMO networks. We impose fairness by ensuring that each MNO receives spectrum in proportion to the amount it contributes. We formulate a constrained optimization problem to determine resource allocation and user scheduling across two MNOs. Since the problem is non-convex, we develop an algorithm to provide an effective solution through fractional programming and block coordinate descent. Our numerical results illustrate that the proposed spectrum sharing scheme can achieve up to 60 % improvement in terms of the average user rate among the two operators while ensuring that neither MNO is exploited for participating in the sharing mechanism. This improvement is in relation to the baseline of each MNO using multi-user MIMO communications on its own. In addition, most users, especially cell-center users close to the BSs, take advantage of our proposed spectrum sharing framework.

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