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July 20 09 Ari A htiai nen, Slide 1 doc.: IEEE 802.19-09/0046r0 Submission A Cooperation Mechanism for Coexistence between Secondary User Networks on TVWS Notice: This document has been prepared to assist IEEE 802.19. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein. Date: 2009-07-14 N am e C om pany A ddress Phone em ail AriAhtiainen N okia R esearch C enter Itäm erenkatu 11-13, 00180 H elsinki, Finland +358 50 4836426 [email protected] M ika K asslin N okia R esearch C enter Itäm erenkatu 11-13, 00180 H elsinki, Finland +358 50 4836294 mika.kasslin@ nokia.com Authors:

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Page 1: Doc.: IEEE 802.19-09/0046r0 Submission July 2009 Ari Ahtiainen, NokiaSlide 1 A Cooperation Mechanism for Coexistence between Secondary User Networks on

July 2009

Ari Ahtiainen, Nokia

Slide 1

doc.: IEEE 802.19-09/0046r0

Submission

A Cooperation Mechanism for Coexistence between Secondary User Networks on TVWS

Notice: This document has been prepared to assist IEEE 802.19. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein.

Date: 2009-07-14

Name Company Address Phone email Ari Ahtiainen Nokia Research

Center Itämerenkatu 11-13, 00180 Helsinki, Finland

+358 50 4836426 [email protected]

Mika Kasslin Nokia Research Center

Itämerenkatu 11-13, 00180 Helsinki, Finland

+358 50 4836294 [email protected]

Authors:

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Abstract

This presentation deals with coexistence between secondary user networks operating in TVWS. Database is believed to be the solution to protect the primary users of the TVWS spectrum. We doubt its applicability to address coexistence problems between all secondary users. In this presentation we present an idea of a cooperation network to address the problems in a distributed and more flexible manner.

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Outline

• Problem description (and some terminology)

• Solution proposal– Coexistence network between heterogeneous TVBD networks

• Outline of the solution– Cooperation Radio and Network

– Characteristics and requirements

– Selected functionalities

• Conclusions

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Terminology and Goal Setting

• Coexistence – Effective common use of the spectrum among networks of TV band devices

• Coexistence Mechanism – A technique to provide effective sharing of the spectrum between networks of TV band devices. Examples include DFS, TPC, listen before talk, TDMA, Message-based Spectrum Contention, etc.

Goal setting by 802 EC (March 2009)• Support for coexistence mechanisms so that multiple

technologies can effectively utilize the spectrum is important

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Problem Description

• In TVWS the operation environment will be very heterogeneous– Multiple TVBD networks and technologies will coexist on the TVWS

bands– Radio technologies will evolve towards frequency agility– Radio channel status is very local

• Propagation environment is very local • TVBD networks can be very dynamic

• Heterogeneous systems require cooperation mechanisms– Cooperation mechanism is the common etiquette for the TVBD networks

• Radio-level listen before talk is not enough – Cooperation enables

• Sharing of spectrum sensing responsibilities (who and when)– Possibility for common quiet periods

• Spectrum resource use negotiation (who and what)– Accommodates TDM, FDM, etc. schemes

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Why Distributed Cooperation?

• Due to the heterogeneity, effective centralized cooperation will become complex– A lot of radio measurement data need to be delivered to the centralized

controller– The controller needs to have means to analyze radio environment in every

possible location upon requests• Distributed cooperation will provide a more feasible solution

– Can accommodate large amount of networks– Mobile devices with sensing only capability would require another radio

to access the database– No single point of failure– The best and up to date knowledge about local radio environment is

available in devices locally present• Local radio environment information can be measured by the devices in

accurate and timely manner

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Solution Proposal – Introduction

• Cooperation with Cognitive Cooperation Radio Network (CCRN)– Control (only) network dedicated for cooperation signaling between

TVBD networks– Secondary user networks agree with each other locally about the resource

sharing– CCRN enables cooperation information flow between the networks– Devices looking for connectivity alternative obtain the required

information from CCRN– Messages on CCRN are defined to be independent of the internal

architectures of the networks to be connected– Targeted to connect different kinds of TVBD networks

• Access or non-access networks• Infrastructure based or device only networks• Operated or ad hoc networks

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Solution Proposal – CCRN Concept

• CCRN consists of nodes from all TVBD networks operating in the same area

• Each node has the capability of using the CCRN for cooperation signaling

User data link

WMAN Base station(Fixed device)

Ad-hoc node(Mode II or Sensing-onlydevice)

Cognitive Cooperation Radio link

WMAN portable(Mode I or Mode II device)

WLAN Access Point(Mode II device)

WLAN portable(Mode I device)

User network 1: WMAN

User network 2: WLAN

User network 3: WAHN

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CCRN – Connectivity

• Physical connectivity– Narrowband radio, dedicated for CCRN operation, especially between

heterogeneous user networks – Frequency assignment to CCRN

• most efficient solution is to assign dedicated band(s) for the CCRN operation

– In each user network at least one node is actively connected to the CCRN

• Logical connectivity– All the nodes connected to user networks have access to information on

CCRN– Nodes not yet connected to any user networks can also access the

information on CCRN– Encapsulation of CCRN information depends on the user network (in-

band communication)

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CCRN – Characteristics

• Target is to have a lightweight, power efficient solution

• Narrowband, low-capacity radio as a carrier is sufficient

• Allows for stateless routing by message flooding over multiple radio links when needed

• No QoS support required– All messages on CCRN assumed to be equally important

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CCRN – Usage

• Initial access– To efficiently find out TVBD networks in complex heterogeneous

environments• Collaborative spectrum sensing

– To distribute the sensing responsibilities and results between participating nodes (possibly connected to different user networks)

• Dissemination of local spectrum use policies– To ensure that all the nodes follow the same policies (if applicable)

• Spectrum usage information and negotiation– To distribute the local spectrum map, and agree on shared spectrum

utilization • Inter-network synchronization

– To create spectrum sensing measurement period (quiet period), common to user networks

– E.g. to support TDM-based coexistence schemes

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CCRN – What it Takes?

• CCRN radio has unique characteristics that are not met with any existing standard radio– User data networks are heavyweight solutions for the CCRN

• IEEE 802 architecture fits well in the CCRN requirements– Simple radio designed for CCRN

• CCRN requires a frequency channel allocated to it– In the case of TVWS one narrowband channel should be allocated

for CCRN• Small portion of 6 MHz channels enough

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Summary

• Cognitive Cooperation Radio Network concept introduced– Important technology enabler for cooperative coexistence in

heterogeneous cognitive radio ecosystems• Future work

– Concept finalization and more detailed specifications– Detailed performance assessment – Regulatory impacts– Standardization

• Proposed actions– IEEE 802.19 TAG is doing a study on Coexistence Mechanisms for 802

radios on White Space – scheduled to finish in November 2009– Include further development of the CCRN-based coexistence schemes

into the summary and recommendations from the .19 SG to 802 EC

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Further Info

• Ahtiainen, A., Kasslin, M. et al, “Awareness Networking in Wireless Environments”, to appear in IEEE Vehicular Technology, September 2009.