Publication | Closed Access
The capacity of wireless networks
8.3K
Citations
13
References
2000
Year
Network ScienceEngineeringW BitsChannel Capacity EstimationCommunication EngineeringFixed RangeWireless LanNetwork AnalysisN Identical RandomlyWireless NetworksCooperative DiversityWireless AccessChannel Access MethodRadio Access ProtocolMulti-terminal Information Theory
Throughput per node in wireless networks of n identical nodes scales only as Θ(W/√(n log n)) under noninterference protocols, and even with optimal placement and traffic assignment the capacity is limited by local channel sharing, yielding a bit‑distance product of Θ(W/√(A n)). The study finds that even with optimal design the per‑node throughput scales only as Θ(W/√n), channel splitting offers no improvement, and thus networks with fewer users or predominantly local connections are more likely to achieve acceptable performance.
When n identical randomly located nodes, each capable of transmitting at W bits per second and using a fixed range, form a wireless network, the throughput /spl lambda/(n) obtainable by each node for a randomly chosen destination is /spl Theta/(W//spl radic/(nlogn)) bits per second under a noninterference protocol. If the nodes are optimally placed in a disk of unit area, traffic patterns are optimally assigned, and each transmission's range is optimally chosen, the bit-distance product that can be transported by the network per second is /spl Theta/(W/spl radic/An) bit-meters per second. Thus even under optimal circumstances, the throughput is only /spl Theta/(W//spl radic/n) bits per second for each node for a destination nonvanishingly far away. Similar results also hold under an alternate physical model where a required signal-to-interference ratio is specified for successful receptions. Fundamentally, it is the need for every node all over the domain to share whatever portion of the channel it is utilizing with nodes in its local neighborhood that is the reason for the constriction in capacity. Splitting the channel into several subchannels does not change any of the results. Some implications may be worth considering by designers. Since the throughput furnished to each user diminishes to zero as the number of users is increased, perhaps networks connecting smaller numbers of users, or featuring connections mostly with nearby neighbors, may be more likely to be find acceptance.
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