English

Wireless Device-to-Device Communications with Distributed Caching

Information Theory 2012-06-01 v1 Networking and Internet Architecture math.IT

Abstract

We introduce a novel wireless device-to-device (D2D) collaboration architecture that exploits distributed storage of popular content to enable frequency reuse. We identify a fundamental conflict between collaboration distance and interference and show how to optimize the transmission power to maximize frequency reuse. Our analysis depends on the user content request statistics which are modeled by a Zipf distribution. Our main result is a closed form expression of the optimal collaboration distance as a function of the content reuse distribution parameters. We show that if the Zipf exponent of the content reuse distribution is greater than 1, it is possible to have a number of D2D interference-free collaboration pairs that scales linearly in the number of nodes. If the Zipf exponent is smaller than 1, we identify the best possible scaling in the number of D2D collaborating links. Surprisingly, a very simple distributed caching policy achieves the optimal scaling behavior and therefore there is no need to centrally coordinate what each node is caching.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1205.7044,
  title  = {Wireless Device-to-Device Communications with Distributed Caching},
  author = {Negin Golrezaei and Alexandros G. Dimakis and Andreas F. Molisch},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1205.7044},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

to appear in ISIT 2012

R2 v1 2026-06-21T21:12:34.054Z