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Dive into the research topics where Mehmet Yavuz is active.

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Featured researches published by Mehmet Yavuz.


IEEE Communications Magazine | 2009

Interference management and performance analysis of UMTS/HSPA+ femtocells

Mehmet Yavuz; Farhad Meshkati; Sanjiv Nanda; Akhilesh Pokhariyal; Nick Johnson; Balaji Raghothaman; Andy Richardson

Femtocells are low-power cellular base stations that operate in licensed spectrum. They are typically deployed indoors to improve coverage and provide excellent user experience, including high data rates. Cellular operators benefit from reduced infrastructure and operational expenses for capacity upgrades and coverage improvements. Femtocells also bring unique challenges, such as unplanned deployment, user installation, restricted access, and interoperability with existing handsets and network infrastructure. Although femtocells may cause some interference to other users in the network, with the use of proper interference management techniques, this can be well controlled. We present interference management techniques for both downlink and uplink of femtocells operating based on 3GPP Release 7 standards (also known as HSPA+). Femtocell carrier selection and femtocell DL Tx power self-calibration are proposed as key interference management methods for downlink. For uplink interference management, adaptive attenuation at the femtocell and limiting the Tx power of the femtocell users are proposed. Different interference models and their analysis are presented. In addition, coverage performance and capacity results are presented to quantify the benefits of femtocells. We demonstrate that in addition to coverage enhancements, significant capacity improvements are achieved on both downlink and uplink when femtocells are deployed in 3G UMTS/HSPA+ networks.


IEEE Communications Magazine | 2006

VoIP over cdma2000 1xEV-DO revision A

Mehmet Yavuz; Serafin Diaz; Rohit Kapoor; Matthew S. Grob; Peter J. Black; Yeliz Tokgoz; Christopher Gerard Lott

In this article we analyze performance of VoIP services over 1xEVDO-Revision A (DO-Rev A) networks and show that high-quality VoIP with unconstrained mobility and high capacity can be achieved. Together with quality of service (QoS) requirements, we emphasize practical issues such as mobility, degradation of feedback-channel quality, and packet overheads. Novel techniques are presented for voice processing such as smart blanking and adaptive dejitter playback buffer with time warping. These techniques help to meet QoS constraints to achieve a circuit-like voice quality while improving overall capacity. Detailed end-to-end simulations are presented and system capacity is analyzed under the QoS and system stability constraints. We claim that DO-Rev A can provide VoIP capacity comparable to circuit-switched cellular CDMA technologies (e.g., IS-2000) and simultaneously carry significant amount of other types of traffic such as non-delay sensitive applications and downlink multicast.


global communications conference | 2009

Uplink Interference Management for HSPA+ and 1xEVDO Femtocells

Yeliz Tokgoz; Farhad Meshkati; Yan Zhou; Mehmet Yavuz; Sanjiv Nanda

Femtocells are low power cellular base stations typically deployed indoors in residential and enterprise environments as well as hotspots in order to improve voice and high rate data coverage and provide excellent user experience. The cellular operator benefits from reduced infrastructure deployment costs for capacity upgrades and coverage improvements. While improving performance, femtocells may cause some interference to other users in the network. However, with the use of proper interference management techniques, this interference may be well controlled. This paper focuses on uplink (UL) interference management techniques for 3G femtocell deployments. On the UL, the challenge is the presence of large uncontrolled interference from nearby users not associated by the femtocell that result in high noise rise (rise-over-thermal, RoT), that may lead to poor femto user experience. Femtocell users that can not be power controlled due to their very close proximity to femtocells may also cause high noise rise levels. An algorithm is proposed for both HSPA+ and 1xEVDO femtocells to desensitize the receiver when uncontrolled interference is detected, ensuring robust UL performance with minimal impact on the macro network. It is demonstrated through system level simulations that in addition to superior performance experienced by femtocell users, the macro users also benefit significantly from offloading traffic load to the femto network.


IEEE Wireless Communications | 2010

Femtocells [Industry Perspectives]

Chirag Sureshbhai Patel; Mehmet Yavuz; Sanjiv Nanda

Femtocells, also known as home NodeBs (HNBs) or femto access points (FAPs), are low-transmit-power (100 mW or less) small-form-factor cellular base stations typically deployed indoors in residential, enterprise, and hotspot settings. Femtocells operate on licensed spectrum and provide voice/data service to mobile phone users by connecting them to the Internet and an operator?s core network using a broadband Internet connection (e.g. ADSL, cable) as a backhaul. Femtocell users experience excellent voice call quality and near peak data rates due to improved radio frequency (RF) coverage.


IEEE Communications Magazine | 2009

System design of CDMA2000 femtocells

Pierre A. Humblet; Balaji Raghothaman; Anand Srinivas; Srinivasan Balasubramanian; Chirag Sureshbhai Patel; Mehmet Yavuz

Femtocells extend the cellular network coverage and provide high speed data service inside homes and enterprises for mobiles supporting existing cellular radio communication techniques. They also provide additional system capacity by offloading macro network traffic. This article reviews the characteristics of cdma2000-based femtocell systems. It discusses design and deployment aspects such as carrier allocation, access control, efficient support for femtocell discovery by idle mobiles, and active call hand-in from macrocell to femtocell. The evolution of the cdma2000 standard for optimizing performance and enriching user experience with femtocells is also discussed.


global communications conference | 2009

Mobility and Capacity Offload for 3G UMTS Femtocells

Farhad Meshkati; Yi Jiang; Lenny Grokop; Sumeeth Nagaraja; Mehmet Yavuz; Sanjiv Nanda

Femtocells are low-power cellular base stations that are typically deployed indoors in residential, enterprise or hotspots settings. Femtocell deployments provide excellent user experience through better coverage for voice and very high data throughputs. In this paper, we focus on 3G UMTS femtocells and analyze the impact of femtocells on idle-mode mobility and UE battery life. Detailed dynamic simulations are presented to quantify the impact of femtocells on the number of cell searches, cell reselections and location area updates for both femtocell users and macro users. It is shown that femtocells reduce the number of intra-frequency and inter-frequency searches for femtocell users while increasing the number of searches for macro users. In addition, methods for facilitating capacity offload to femtocells are presented. In particular, cell reselection parameter optimization, use of beacons and enhancements of UE search algorithms are described as possible methods for facilitating capacity offload to femtocells. The tradeoffs between capacity offload and UE battery life are also evaluated.


vehicular technology conference | 2011

Downlink Transmit Power Calibration for Enterprise Femtocells

Sumeeth Nagaraja; Varun Khaitan; Yi Jiang; Chirag Sureshbhai Patel; Farhad Meshkati; Yeliz Tokgoz; Mehmet Yavuz

Downlink transmit (Tx) power calibration is necessary in femtocell deployments to achieve a good tradeoff between downlink femtocell coverage and interference to other macrocells and femtocells. Developing a practical Tx power calibration scheme that provides excellent performance in different deployment scenarios is challenging. In this paper, we present an enterprise deployment framework that consists of coverage planning and Tx power calibration using technician assistance. The Tx power calibration algorithms presented here use mobile feedback to learn key information such as surrounding RF environment, required coverage range, and interference impact to other cells to adapt to different deployments. Both centralized and distributed Tx power calibration algorithms are evaluated for multi-femto enterprise. It is shown that the distributed algorithm, is simple, efficient and performs very close to the centralized algorithm. Furthermore, over-the-air field tests highlight the practical efficacy of the distributed algorithm in providing excellent femtocell coverage indoors with minimal leakage to outdoors.


vehicular technology conference | 2011

Indoor Positioning Using Femtocells

Varun Khaitan; Peerapol Tinnakornsrisuphap; Mehmet Yavuz

The ability to locate oneself indoors on a map and navigate to desired areas has a wide range of applications. GPS and macro cell tower based positioning are not very effective indoors due to poor signal quality or limited accuracy in location estimation. We propose to solve this problem by deploying an indoor network of femtocells and determining the position of a 3G mobile using the downlink and uplink signals. The measurement of signals from a group of femtocells at the mobile and the measurement of the mobiles transmitted signal at group of femtocells is used for triangulation of the mobiles position. It is shown that a combination of these methods with a cleverly designed transmission schedule involving time orthogonalization of the femtocell signals can enable accurate indoor positioning.


modeling and optimization in mobile, ad-hoc and wireless networks | 2011

Benefits of transmit and receive diversity in enterprise femtocell deployments

Yi Jiang; Yan Zhou; Mohit Anand; Farhad Meshkati; Vinay Chande; Norman Ko; Mehmet Yavuz

In this paper, we study the benefits of transmit and receive diversity for enterprise UMTS femtocell deployments. Indoor enterprise femtocell deployments face a single-path slow fading wireless environment that may lead to frequent hard handovers in the boundary region of neighboring femtocells and consequent degradation in the voice quality experienced by the users. In the absence of soft-handover (SHO) support, transmit diversity at the femtocell can combat single-path fading channel. We demonstrate through over-the-air tests that transmit diversity is very effective in reducing the number of hard handovers and therefore results in significant improvement in voice quality for enterprise users. On the uplink, we study system stability using an analytical approach. We derive analytical conditions for system stability with and without receive diversity at the femtocells. Using this analytical framework, benefits of receive diversity in maintaining system stability and preventing uplink power racing between neighboring femtocells are quantified. It is shown that, in the absence of SHO, receive diversity is very effective in maintaining system stability by preventing potential uplink power racing caused by inter-femto interference.


modeling and optimization in mobile, ad-hoc and wireless networks | 2011

Transmit power self-calibration for residential UMTS/HSPA+ femtocells

Sumeeth Nagaraja; Vinay Chande; Satashu Goel; Farhad Meshkati; Mehmet Yavuz

Downlink transmit power calibration is critical for femtocell deployment to achieve a good tradeoff between downlink coverage and interference impact to a co-channel macrocell network. In this paper, we study the performance of a femtocell power calibration algorithm that uses mobile reports to learn key information such as required coverage region for its own users and amount of interference to non-allowed users to fine-tune the femtocell downlink transmit power. It is shown that such a scheme is able to adapt to different deployment scenarios and provides better control of coverage-interference tradeoff than that provided by algorithms based on Network Listen Module alone.

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