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Communication over interference in wireless networks
The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
PhD Thesis Defence
Title: "Communication over interference in wireless networks"
By
Mr. Kaishun Wu
Abstract
Wireless technologies grow rapidly and benefit almost every aspect of our
daily lives. In a typical multiple-user environment, different users may
severely interfere with each other. How to reduce the coordination
overhead in order to improve the efficiency of the wireless networks
becomes a big challenge.
Unlike the wired counterpart, a wireless link is easily affected by
environment changes and surrounding wireless activities. Determining the
instant link conditions (or qualities) is essential for most protocol
designs and application developments in wireless communications. In
previous studies, link-level metrics are utilized to reflect the link
conditions such as Received Signal Strength Indication (RSSI),
Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) and Signal-to-Interference plus Noise-Ratio
(SINR). In practice, however, these metrics exhibit many limitations and
could be misleading. As they are often the statistic measurements over the
packet transmission while the link conditions may vary dramatically, the
packet-level metrics are unable to indicate the instant link condition.
Motivated by this, we propose to use more fine-grained information from
the lower layer of the network protocol stack. A chip is an accessible
element at the physical layer for many wireless standards such as IEEE
802.15.4 and 802.11b. In these standards, information bits are repackaged
as certain sequences of chips before being transmitted over the air. As
the chip duration is much shorter, it is more capable to capture the
instant channel changes. Analyzing the chip-level error characteristics
brings a new measure for the upper-layer network design such as the
network diagnosis, transmission power control, routing, localization and
topology control.
With the interesting observation that by generating intended patterns,
some simultaneous transmissions, i.e., ”interference”, can be successfully
decoded without degrading the effective throughput in original
transmission. An extra and ”free” coordination channel is thus designed
based on the coding redundancy in DSSS. Based on this idea we propose a
DC-MAC to leverage this ”free” channel for efficient medium access in a
multiple-user wireless network. I also theoretically analyze the capacity
of this channel under different environments with various modulation
schemes.
However, the previous Side Channel design is based on the coding
redundancy in DSSS which cannot work in OFDM-based WLANs. I then propose a
new communication model where the control frames can be ”attached” to the
data transmission. Thus, control messages and data traffic can be
transmitted simultaneously and consequently the channel utilization can be
improved significantly. I implement the idea in OFDM-based WLANs called
hJam, which fully explores the physical layer features of the OFDM
modulation method and allows one data packet and a number of control
messages to be transmitted together.
Date: Thursday, 2 June 2011
Time: 10:00am - 12:00noon
Venue: Room 3494
Lifts 25/26
Chairman: Prof. Qingping Sun (MECH)
Committee Members: Prof. Lionel Ni (Supervisor)
Prof. Shing-Chi Cheung
Prof. Qian Zhang
Prof. Furong Gao (CBME)
Prof. Jiannong Cao (Computing, PolyU.)
**** ALL are Welcome ****