English

Achieving Delay Rate-function Optimality in OFDM Downlink with Time-correlated Channels

Information Theory 2016-02-01 v3 Networking and Internet Architecture math.IT

Abstract

There have been recent attempts to develop scheduling schemes for downlink transmission in a single cell of a multi-channel (e.g., OFDM-based) cellular network. These works have been quite promising in that they have developed low-complexity index scheduling policies that are delay-optimal (in a large deviation rate-function sense). However, these policies require that the channel is ON or OFF in each time-slot with a fixed probability (i.e., there is no memory in the system), while the reality is that due to channel fading and doppler shift, channels are often time-correlated in these cellular systems. Thus, an important open question is whether one can find simple index scheduling policies that are delay-optimal even when the channels are time-correlated. In this paper, we attempt to answer this question for time-correlated ON/OFF channels. In particular, we show that the class of oldest packets first (OPF) policies that give a higher priority to packets with a large delay is delay rate-function optimal under two conditions: 1) The channel is non-negatively correlated, and 2) The distribution of the OFF period is geometric. We use simulations to further elucidate the theoretical results.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1601.06241,
  title  = {Achieving Delay Rate-function Optimality in OFDM Downlink with Time-correlated Channels},
  author = {Zhenzhi Qian and Bo Ji and Kannan Srinivasan and Ness B. Shroff},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1601.06241},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

15 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T12:35:20.070Z