Product Multicommodity Flow in Wireless Networks
Ritesh Madan, Devavrat Shah, and Olivier Leveque

TL;DR
This paper characterizes the capacity region of wireless networks using product multicommodity flow, linking spectral graph properties to network capacity and providing bounds for various interference and fading models.
Contribution
It offers a tight approximation of the PMF region in wireless networks, connecting spectral graph theory with capacity analysis under diverse models.
Findings
Spectral properties of graphs determine network capacity bounds.
Random source-destination models are a one-dimensional approximation.
Efficient bounds on PMF are achievable for general wireless networks.
Abstract
We provide a tight approximate characterization of the -dimensional product multicommodity flow (PMF) region for a wireless network of nodes. Separate characterizations in terms of the spectral properties of appropriate network graphs are obtained in both an information theoretic sense and for a combinatorial interference model (e.g., Protocol model). These provide an inner approximation to the dimensional capacity region. These results answer the following questions which arise naturally from previous work: (a) What is the significance of in the scaling laws for the Protocol interference model obtained by Gupta and Kumar (2000)? (b) Can we obtain a tight approximation to the "maximum supportable flow" for node distributions more general than the geometric random distribution, traffic models other than randomly chosen source-destination pairs, and under very…
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