Optimal Transmitter Placement in Realistic Urban Environments
Lukas Taus, Richard Tsai, Jeffrey G. Andrews

TL;DR
This paper presents a rigorous framework and algorithm for optimal transmitter placement in urban environments, leveraging detailed site maps and signal models to significantly improve network performance.
Contribution
It introduces a novel optimization framework with a submodular functional and a new placement algorithm that guarantees near-optimal solutions in realistic urban scenarios.
Findings
Achieves about 2x increase in mean data rate compared to existing deployments.
Demonstrates 2-8x improvement in edge rates with the same number of transmitters.
Validates approach using ray tracing simulations on real city maps.
Abstract
In a wireless network, the spatial location of the transmitters has a large impact on the achievable rate at each user location. The optimal placement of -- for example -- cellular base stations is a difficult non-convex problem, and is usually addressed with simplified propagation models and simplified heuristics that may account for specifics such as the site topology, building locations, and user density. We propose a mathematically rigorous framework for optimal transmitter placement that explicitly integrates detailed site-specific maps, spatial material properties, and realistic signal attenuation. We introduce a novel aggregated network quality functional which captures the essential trade-off between maximizing network coverage and minimizing cost, and establish the problem's sub-modularity under certain practical conditions. To solve the resulting resource-constrained…
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