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Dive into the research topics where Harpreet S. Dhillon is active.

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Featured researches published by Harpreet S. Dhillon.


IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications | 2012

Modeling and Analysis of K-Tier Downlink Heterogeneous Cellular Networks

Harpreet S. Dhillon; Radha Krishna Ganti; François Baccelli; Jeffrey G. Andrews

Cellular networks are in a major transition from a carefully planned set of large tower-mounted base-stations (BSs) to an irregular deployment of heterogeneous infrastructure elements that often additionally includes micro, pico, and femtocells, as well as distributed antennas. In this paper, we develop a tractable, flexible, and accurate model for a downlink heterogeneous cellular network (HCN) consisting of K tiers of randomly located BSs, where each tier may differ in terms of average transmit power, supported data rate and BS density. Assuming a mobile user connects to the strongest candidate BS, the resulting Signal-to-Interference-plus-Noise-Ratio (SINR) is greater than 1 when in coverage, Rayleigh fading, we derive an expression for the probability of coverage (equivalently outage) over the entire network under both open and closed access, which assumes a strikingly simple closed-form in the high SINR regime and is accurate down to -4 dB even under weaker assumptions. For external validation, we compare against an actual LTE network (for tier 1) with the other K-1 tiers being modeled as independent Poisson Point Processes. In this case as well, our model is accurate to within 1-2 dB. We also derive the average rate achieved by a randomly located mobile and the average load on each tier of BSs. One interesting observation for interference-limited open access networks is that at a given \sinr, adding more tiers and/or BSs neither increases nor decreases the probability of coverage or outage when all the tiers have the same target-SINR.


IEEE Communications Magazine | 2012

Heterogeneous cellular networks: From theory to practice

Amitabha Ghosh; Nitin Mangalvedhe; Rapeepat Ratasuk; Bishwarup Mondal; Mark Cudak; Eugene Visotsky; Timothy A. Thomas; Jeffrey G. Andrews; Ping Xia; Han-Shin Jo; Harpreet S. Dhillon; Thomas David Novlan

The proliferation of internet-connected mobile devices will continue to drive growth in data traffic in an exponential fashion, forcing network operators to dramatically increase the capacity of their networks. To do this cost-effectively, a paradigm shift in cellular network infrastructure deployment is occurring away from traditional (expensive) high-power tower-mounted base stations and towards heterogeneous elements. Examples of heterogeneous elements include microcells, picocells, femtocells, and distributed antenna systems (remote radio heads), which are distinguished by their transmit powers/ coverage areas, physical size, backhaul, and propagation characteristics. This shift presents many opportunities for capacity improvement, and many new challenges to co-existence and network management. This article discusses new theoretical models for understanding the heterogeneous cellular networks of tomorrow, and the practical constraints and challenges that operators must tackle in order for these networks to reach their potential.


IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications | 2013

Offloading in Heterogeneous Networks: Modeling, Analysis, and Design Insights

Sarabjot Singh; Harpreet S. Dhillon; Jeffrey G. Andrews

Pushing data traffic from cellular to WiFi is an example of inter radio access technology (RAT) offloading. While this clearly alleviates congestion on the over-loaded cellular network, the ultimate potential of such offloading and its effect on overall system performance is not well understood. To address this, we develop a general and tractable model that consists of M different RATs, each deploying up to K different tiers of access points (APs), where each tier differs in transmit power, path loss exponent, deployment density and bandwidth. Each class of APs is modeled as an independent Poisson point process (PPP), with mobile user locations modeled as another independent PPP, all channels further consisting of i.i.d. Rayleigh fading. The distribution of rate over the entire network is then derived for a weighted association strategy, where such weights can be tuned to optimize a particular objective. We show that the optimum fraction of traffic offloaded to maximize SINR coverage is not in general the same as the one that maximizes rate coverage, defined as the fraction of users achieving a given rate.


IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications | 2013

Analytical Modeling of Uplink Cellular Networks

Thomas David Novlan; Harpreet S. Dhillon; Jeffrey G. Andrews

Cellular uplink analysis has typically been undertaken by either a simple approach that lumps all interference into a single deterministic or random parameter in a Wyner-type model, or via complex system level simulations that often do not provide insight into why various trends are observed. This paper proposes a novel middle way using point processes that is both accurate and also results in easy-to-evaluate integral expressions based on the Laplace transform of the interference. We assume mobiles and base stations are randomly placed in the network with each mobile pairing up to its closest base station. Compared to related recent work on downlink analysis, the proposed uplink model differs in two key features. First, dependence is considered between user and base station point processes to make sure each base station serves a single mobile in the given resource block. Second, per-mobile power control is included, which further couples the transmission of mobiles due to location-dependent channel inversion. Nevertheless, we succeed in deriving the coverage (equivalently outage) probability of a typical link in the network. This model can be used to address a wide variety of system design questions in the future. In this paper we focus on the implications for power control and show that partial channel inversion should be used at low signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR), while full power transmission is optimal at higher SINR.


IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications | 2013

Downlink MIMO HetNets: Modeling, Ordering Results and Performance Analysis

Harpreet S. Dhillon; Marios Kountouris; Jeffrey G. Andrews

We develop a general downlink model for multi-antenna heterogeneous cellular networks (HetNets), where base stations (BSs) across tiers may differ in terms of transmit power, target signal-to-interference-ratio (SIR), deployment density, number of transmit antennas and the type of multi-antenna transmission. In particular, we consider and compare space division multiple access (SDMA), single user beamforming (SU-BF), and baseline single-input single-output (SISO) transmission. For this general model, the main contributions are: (i) ordering results for both coverage probability and per user rate in closed form for any BS distribution for the three considered techniques, using novel tools from stochastic orders, (ii) upper bounds on the coverage probability assuming a Poisson BS distribution, and (iii) a comparison of the area spectral efficiency (ASE). The analysis concretely demonstrates, for example, that for a given total number of transmit antennas in the network, it is preferable to spread them across many single-antenna BSs vs. fewer multi-antenna BSs. Another observation is that SU-BF provides higher coverage and per user data rate than SDMA, but SDMA is in some cases better in terms of ASE.


IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications | 2013

Load-Aware Modeling and Analysis of Heterogeneous Cellular Networks

Harpreet S. Dhillon; Radha Krishna Ganti; Jeffrey G. Andrews

Random spatial models are attractive for modeling heterogeneous cellular networks (HCNs) due to their realism, tractability, and scalability. A major limitation of such models to date in the context of HCNs is the neglect of network traffic and load: all base stations (BSs) have typically been assumed to always be transmitting. Small cells in particular will have a lighter load than macrocells, and so their contribution to the network interference may be significantly overstated in a fully loaded model. This paper incorporates a flexible notion of BS load by introducing a new idea of conditionally thinning the interference field. For a K-tier HCN where BSs across tiers differ in terms of transmit power, supported data rate, deployment density, and now load, we derive the coverage probability for a typical mobile, which connects to the strongest BS signal. Conditioned on this connection, the interfering BSs of the i^{th} tier are assumed to transmit independently with probability p_i, which models the load. Assuming — reasonably — that smaller cells are more lightly loaded than macrocells, the analysis shows that adding such access points to the network always increases the coverage probability. We also observe that fully loaded models are quite pessimistic in terms of coverage.


IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications | 2014

Fundamentals of Heterogeneous Cellular Networks with Energy Harvesting

Harpreet S. Dhillon; Ying Li; Pavan Nuggehalli; Zhouyue Pi; Jeffrey G. Andrews

We develop a new tractable model for K-tier heterogeneous cellular networks (HetNets), where each base station (BS) is powered solely by a self-contained energy harvesting module. The BSs across tiers differ in terms of the energy harvesting rate, energy storage capacity, transmit power and deployment density. Since a BS may not always have enough energy, it may need to be kept OFF and allowed to recharge while nearby users are served by neighboring BSs that are ON. We show that the fraction of time a kth tier BS can be kept ON, termed availability ρk, is a fundamental metric of interest. Using tools from random walk theory, fixed point analysis and stochastic geometry, we characterize the set of K-tuples (ρ1, ρ2, ... ρK), termed the availability region, that is achievable by general uncoordinated operational strategies, where the decision to toggle the current ON/OFF state of a BS is taken independently of the other BSs. If the availability vector corresponding to the optimal system performance, e.g., in terms of rate, lies in this availability region, there is no performance loss due to the presence of unreliable energy sources. As a part of our analysis, we model the temporal dynamics of the energy level at each BS as a birth-death process, derive the energy utilization rate, and use hitting/stopping time analysis to prove that there exists a fundamental limit on ρk that cannot be surpassed by any uncoordinated strategy.


IEEE Wireless Communications Letters | 2014

Downlink Rate Distribution in Heterogeneous Cellular Networks under Generalized Cell Selection

Harpreet S. Dhillon; Jeffrey G. Andrews

Considering both small-scale fading and long-term shadowing, we characterize the downlink rate distribution at a typical user equipment (UE) in a heterogeneous cellular network (HetNet), where shadowing, following any general distribution, impacts cell selection while fading does not. Most prior work either ignores the impact of channel randomness on cell selection or lumps all the sources of randomness into a single variable, with cell selection based on the instantaneous signal strength, which is unrealistic. As an application of the results, we study the impact of shadowing on load balancing in terms of the optimal per-tier selection bias needed for rate maximization.


IEEE Transactions on Communications | 2014

Physical Layer Security in Downlink Multi-Antenna Cellular Networks

Giovanni Geraci; Harpreet S. Dhillon; Jeffrey G. Andrews; Jinhong Yuan; Iain B. Collings

In this paper, we study physical layer security for the downlink of cellular networks, where the confidential messages transmitted to each mobile user can be eavesdropped by both; 1) the other users in the same cell and 2) the users in the other cells. The locations of base stations and mobile users are modeled as two independent two-dimensional Poisson point processes. Using the proposed model, we analyze the secrecy rates achievable by regularized channel inversion (RCI) precoding by performing a large-system analysis that combines tools from stochastic geometry and random matrix theory. We obtain approximations for the probability of secrecy outage and the mean secrecy rate, and characterize regimes where RCI precoding achieves a non-zero secrecy rate. We find that unlike isolated cells, if one treats interference as noise, the secrecy rate in a cellular network does not grow monotonically with the transmit power, and the network tends to be in secrecy outage if the transmit power grows unbounded. Furthermore, we show that there is an optimal value for the base station deployment density that maximizes the secrecy rate, and this value is a decreasing function of the transmit power.


information theory and applications | 2011

A tractable framework for coverage and outage in heterogeneous cellular networks

Harpreet S. Dhillon; Radha Krishna Ganti; Jeffrey G. Andrews

We develop a tractable, flexible, and accurate model for downlink heterogeneous cellular networks. It consists of K tiers of randomly-located base stations (BSs), where each tier may differ in terms of the average transmit power, the supported data rate and the BS density. This allows elements spanning traditional, micro, pico, and femtocell BSs to be simultaneously considered. Assuming a mobile user connects to its strongest BS, we derive its Signal-to-Interference-Ratio (SIR) distribution and use that to find the coverage (equivalently outage) probability over the entire network. We verify the accuracy of these analytical results through empirical comparisons with an actual 4G macro-cell network.

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Jeffrey G. Andrews

University of Texas at Austin

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Peter Han Joo Chong

Auckland University of Technology

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Radha Krishna Ganti

Indian Institute of Technology Madras

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