TL;DR
This paper investigates the use of dynamic channel bonding in high-density WLANs, demonstrating that wider, potentially overlapping channels with adaptive policies improve throughput but require fairness management.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis showing the advantages of wider, overlapping channels with adaptive policies in high-density WLANs, challenging traditional non-overlapping channel approaches.
Findings
DCB significantly outperforms single-channel in throughput.
Wider overlapping channels can increase unfairness among WLANs.
Adaptive policies help mitigate fairness issues in DCB deployments.
Abstract
Wireless local area networks (WLANs) are the most popular kind of wireless Internet connection because of their simplicity of deployment and operation. As a result, the number of devices accessing the Internet through WLANs such as laptops, smartphones, or wearables, is increasing drastically at the same time that applications' throughput requirements do. To cope with these challenges, channel bonding (CB) techniques are used for enabling higher data rates by transmitting in wider channels, thus increasing spectrum efficiency. However, important issues like higher potential co-channel and adjacent channel interference arise when bonding channels. This may harm the performance of the carrier sense multiple access (CSMA) protocol because of recurrent backoff freezing while making nodes more sensitive to hidden node effects. In this paper, we address the following point at issue: is it…
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