A New Analysis of the DS-CDMA Cellular Downlink Under Spatial Constraints
Matthew C. Valenti, Don Torrieri, and Salvatore Talarico

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new analytical framework for DS-CDMA cellular downlink networks with spatial constraints, providing insights into outage probability, rate distribution, and network capacity under various resource policies.
Contribution
It presents a novel closed-form expression for outage probability conditioned on network realization, enabling comprehensive analysis of rate, capacity, and fairness in constrained spatial models.
Findings
The analysis quantifies the impact of minimum base station separation on network performance.
It compares rate-control and power-control policies in terms of efficiency and fairness.
The model accounts for complex channel effects like path loss, fading, and shadowing.
Abstract
The direct-sequence code-division multiple access (DS-CDMA) cellular downlink is modeled by a constrained random spatial model involving a fixed number of base stations placed over a finite area with a minimum separation. The analysis is driven by a new closed-form expression for the conditional outage probability at each mobile, where the conditioning is with respect to the network realization. The analysis features a flexible channel model, accounting for path loss, Nakagami fading, and shadowing. By generating many random networks and applying a given resource allocation policy, the distribution of the rates provided to each user is obtained. In addition to determining the average rate, the analysis can determine the transmission capacity of the network and can characterize fairness in terms of the fraction of users that achieve a specified rate. The analysis is used to compare a…
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