Spectrum Sharing Scheme Between Cellular Users and Ad-hoc Device-to-Device Users
Brett Kaufman, Jorma Lilleberg, Behnaam Aazhang

TL;DR
This paper proposes a distributed spectrum sharing protocol enabling device-to-device users to opportunistically access cellular spectrum, reducing interference and power consumption while maintaining cellular service quality.
Contribution
It introduces a novel dynamic spectrum sharing scheme with interference management and route discovery enhancements for D2D communications.
Findings
Reduced route discovery failure rate
Lower power consumption for D2D communication
Minimal impact on cellular network performance
Abstract
In an attempt to utilize spectrum resources more efficiently, protocols sharing licensed spectrum with unlicensed users are receiving increased attention. From the perspective of cellular networks, spectrum underutilization makes spatial reuse a feasible complement to existing standards. Interference management is a major component in designing these schemes as it is critical that licensed users maintain their expected quality of service. We develop a distributed dynamic spectrum protocol in which ad-hoc device-to-device users opportunistically access the spectrum actively in use by cellular users. First, channel gain estimates are used to set feasible transmit powers for device-to-device users that keeps the interference they cause within the allowed interference temperature. Then network information is distributed by route discovery packets in a random access manner to help…
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