How Many Small Cells Can Be Turned off via Vertical Offloading under a Separation Architecture?
Shan Zhang, Jie Gong, Sheng Zhou, Zhisheng Niu

TL;DR
This paper provides a theoretical analysis of how many small cells in a hyper-cellular network can be turned off via vertical offloading under a separation architecture, considering different sleeping schemes and traffic conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework for quantifying small cell sleep ratios considering random and repulsive schemes with vertical offloading in hyper-cellular networks.
Findings
Expected sleep ratio inversely proportional to SC-layer traffic load
Repulsive scheme less sensitive to traffic variations
Denser MBS deployment enables turning off more SCs
Abstract
To further improve the energy efficiency of heterogeneous networks, a separation architecture called hyper-cellular network (HCN) has been proposed, which decouples the control signaling and data transmission functions. Specifically, the control coverage is guaranteed by macro base stations (MBSs), whereas small cells (SCs) are only utilized for data transmission. Under HCN, SCs can be dynamically turned off when traffic load decreases for energy saving. A fundamental problem then arises: how many SCs can be turned off as traffic varies? In this paper, we address this problem in a theoretical way, where two sleeping schemes (i.e., random and repulsive schemes) with vertical inter-layer offloading are considered. Analytical results indicate the following facts: (1) Under the random scheme where SCs are turned off with certain probability, the expected ratio of sleeping SCs is inversely…
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