Performance Analysis of VoIP Traffic in WiMAX using various Service Classes
Tarik Anouari, Abdelkrim Haqiq

TL;DR
This paper evaluates VoIP performance over WiMAX networks using different service classes and codecs, focusing on QoS parameters like throughput, jitter, and delay through simulation.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of VoIP codecs and service classes in WiMAX, highlighting their impact on QoS metrics using ns2 simulations.
Findings
G711 codec achieves higher throughput and lower delay.
Service class selection significantly affects jitter and QoS.
G7231 and G729 codecs show different performance trade-offs.
Abstract
Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX) is currently one of the hottest technologies in wireless, it is a standard-based on the IEEE 802.16 wireless technology that provides high throughput broadband connections over long distance, which supports Point to MultiPoint (PMP) broadband wireless access. In parallel, Voice over Internet Protocol is a promising new technology which provides access to voice communication over internet protocol based network, it becomes an alternative to public switched telephone networks due to its capability of transmission of voice as packets over IP networks. Therefore VoIP is largely intolerant of delay and hence it needs a high priority transmission. In this paper we investigate the performances of the most common VoIP codecs, which are G711, G7231 and G729 over a WiMAX network using various service classes and NOAH as a transport protocol.…
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