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Fifth Annual Conference on Communication Networks and Services Research (CNSR '07)
Outage Probability and Percentage of Cell Area for OFDMA Cellular Systems with Sectoring
Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
May 14-May 17
ISBN: 0-7695-2835-X
M. A. Nasr, AAST, Alexandria, Egypt
Heba A. Shaban, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (VT-MENA), AAST, Alexandria Egypt
W.H. Tranter, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) is an important candidate for fourth generation cellular systems that support high data rates. Performance of OFDM systems is sensitive to non-perfect frequency synchronization, which leads to frequency offsets and a consequent degradation in system performance. In cellular systems, there is a tradeoff between link quality and capacity; both are controlled by cell cluster size. Smaller cluster sizes gain higher capacity, yet they cause an increase in cochannel interference, which degrades the system outage probability performance. Moreover, a key technique for reducing co-channel interference is sectoring, where a single OMNI directional antenna is replaced by multiple directional antennas. In this paper, the performance of OFDMA cellular systems with sectoring is investigated aided with extensive simulations. System performance is evaluated through the investigation of system outage probability and percentage of cell area for various system configurations namely, various cluster sizes, sectoring factors and frequency offsets.
Citation:
M. A. Nasr, Heba A. Shaban, W.H. Tranter, "Outage Probability and Percentage of Cell Area for OFDMA Cellular Systems with Sectoring," cnsr, pp.107-116, Fifth Annual Conference on Communication Networks and Services Research (CNSR '07), 2007
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