Abstract:
Cellular systems are extremely popular. These are the systems that ignited the wireless
revolution. Cellular systems provide duplex voice and data communication with regional
and national coverage. The basic premise behind cellular system design is frequency reuse
pattern, which exploits the fact that signal power falls off with distance to re-use the
same frequency spectrum at spatially separated locations.
Cellular systems’ frequency band is a very limited resource, even after applying multiple
access methods and aggressive frequency re-use, mobile service providers still face the
challenge of over-congestion due to growing size and demand. The degree of Traffic
Channel (TCH) congestion in the network results in large number of TCH blocking
which greatly affects negatively the subscriber satisfaction and revenue of a mobile
service provider. The available congestion relief methodologies such as cell splitting,
microcells and expanding frequency bands depend on time and cost factors for
implementation.
Network parameters are manually adjusted to obtain a high level of network
performance. There are many parameters for solving uneven load distribution in the
cluster. Some of them are transmitter power, Cell Bar Quality (CBQ), Half-Rate,
RXLEV-ACCESS-MIN, Timing Advance (TA) and Handoff threshold and among
others. All the above techniques of load balancing are not self-adaptive in the sense that
every time congestion occurred in the network either of the above methods has to be
manually applied.
xiv
In an effort to address the above challenges, this research presents a design and
implementation of a fuzzy multi-criteria handoff algorithm based on signal strength, pathloss,
traffic load of BTS and Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR). The algorithm balances traffic
in all the neighboring BTSs at any time and enhances the performance of the cellular
system by selecting the best network segment. This was achieved by multi-criteria
handoff algorithm using fuzzy logic. The proposed algorithm has been tested using data
from wireless propagation models based on straight line mobility between two BTSs in
suburban area.
Simulation results show the MS in the region between 2000m to 7000m dynamically
swing between BTS I and J depending the load on the BTSs. The coverage area of a BTS
can dynamically be expand towards a nearby loaded cell or shrunk towards cell center for
a loaded sector. Therefore, this mechanism activates a handoff procedure to shift some
traffic of a loaded cell towards a lightly loaded cell thereby increase the resource
utilization. In case of low load scenarios, the coverage area of a BTS is presumed to be
virtually widened to cover up to the partial serving area of neighboring BTS. This helps a
highly loaded neighboring BTS.