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Energy-efficient Sleep-mode Operations for Broadband Wireless Access Systems. You-Lin Chen and Shiao-Li Tsao. IEEE 64th Vehicular Technology Conference, Sep. 2006. Outline. Introduction 802.16e sleep mode operations and power consumption issues
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Energy-efficient Sleep-mode Operations for Broadband Wireless Access Systems You-Lin Chen and Shiao-Li Tsao IEEE 64th Vehicular Technology Conference, Sep. 2006
Outline • Introduction • 802.16e sleep mode operations and power consumption issues • Energy-efficient scheduler for sleep-mode operations • Simulation results • Conclusions and future work
Introduction • Mobile devises are normally battery-operated • IEEE 802.16e specifies three power-saving class for different applications • MSS should stay in sleep periods as much as possible but not to violate the QoS requirements
Periodic on-off scheme (PS) • Sleep and listen for a fixed period in a round-robin basis • Based on IEEE 802.16e power-saving class of type-2 • Schedule the packets in fewer OFDM frames without violating the QoS
Maximal data transmit and receive in a listen period • Tframe: length of an OFDM frame • Bframe: BS can supply the maximal resources in an OFDM frame • NS: number of OFDM frame in a sleep period • NA: number of OFDM frame in a listen period • Qi {PSi , TIi, Di}: QoS parameters of connection i • PSi: average packet size for connection i • TIi: average inter-packet arrive time for connection i • Di: delay constraint of any two consecutive packets for connection i
Average power consumption PA > PS PS: power consumption of a MSS in sleep mode PA: power consumption of a MSS in listen mode Maximize here to reduce average power consumption
Aperiodic on-off scheme (AC) • Using the type-3 power-saving class • First sorts all connections • Tight delay constraint packet has higher priority • Connection i: The first priority connection • Bj,i: amount of data required by connection i in the jth OFDM frame • Bk: amount of data for other connections of the MSS has been scheduled in kth OFDM frame (k >= j) ; (0 <= Bk <= Bframe) j k
Bandwidth and delay constrains of AS If Bframe= 10 k j 2 k 5 If Tframe= 10 k Di = 35 j = 2 (4-2+1)x10 <= 35 k = 4
Simulation results • The length of an OFDM frame is 5 ms • The maximal data rate from BS to a MS is 1600 kbps • Traditional scheme • Assign OFDM frames to a MSS whenever the MSS needs to send or to receive packets
Percentage of sleep periods of a MSS by different scheduling schemes
Conclusion and future work • Two scheduling schemes for sleep-mode in IEEE 802.16e • These schemes minimize the power consumption of a MSS under QoS • Increase 15% to 50% more sleep time than traditional approach • Applying to multiple-MSS and global optimization for a BS’s point of view