Location-Based Load Balancing for Energy-Efficient Cell-Free Networks
Robbert Beerten, Vida Ranjbar, Andrea P. Guevara, Hazem Sallouha,, Sofie Pollin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel energy-efficient load balancing method for cell-free networks that reduces measurement overhead and computational complexity while maintaining quality of service.
Contribution
It proposes a convex feasibility testing approach and an iterative AP activation algorithm that outperform existing methods in efficiency and scalability.
Findings
Comparable performance to optimal solutions
Reduced measurement and computational overhead
Effective energy savings in non-peak traffic conditions
Abstract
Cell-Free Massive MIMO (CF mMIMO) has emerged as a potential enabler for future networks. It has been shown that these networks are much more energy-efficient than classical cellular systems when they are serving users at peak capacity. However, these CF mMIMO networks are designed for peak traffic loads, and when this is not the case, they are significantly over-dimensioned and not at all energy efficient. To this end, Adaptive Access Point (AP) ON/OFF Switching (ASO) strategies have been developed to save energy when the network is not at peak traffic loads by putting unnecessary APs to sleep. Unfortunately, the existing strategies rely on measuring channel state information between every user and every access point, resulting in significant measurement energy consumption overheads. Furthermore, the current state-of-art approach has a computational complexity that scales exponentially…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding · Interconnection Networks and Systems
