Backhaul-aware Drone Base Station Placement and Resource Management for FSO-based Drone-assisted Mobile Networks
In drone-assisted mobile networks, Drone-mounted Base Stations (DBSs) are responsively and flexibly deployed over any Places of Interest (PoI), such as sporadic hotspots and disaster-struck areas, where the existing mobile network infrastructure is unable to provide wireless coverage. In this paper,...
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Zusammenfassung: | In drone-assisted mobile networks, Drone-mounted Base Stations (DBSs) are
responsively and flexibly deployed over any Places of Interest (PoI), such as
sporadic hotspots and disaster-struck areas, where the existing mobile network
infrastructure is unable to provide wireless coverage. In this paper, a DBS is
an aerial base station to relay traffic between a nearby Macro Base Station
(MBS) and the users. In addition, Free Space Optics (FSO) is applied as the
backhauling solution to significantly increase the capacity of the backhaul
link between an MBS and a DBS. Most of the existing DBS placement solutions
assume the FSO-based backhaul link provides sufficient link capacity, which may
not be true, especially when a DBS is placed far away from an MBS (e.g., > 10
km in disaster-struck areas) or in a bad weather condition. In this paper, we
formulate a problem to jointly optimize bandwidth allocation and DBS placement
by considering the FSO-based backhaul link capacity constraint. A Backhaul
awaRe bandwidth allOcAtion and DBS placement (BROAD) algorithm is designed to
efficiently solve the problem, and the performance of the algorithm is
demonstrated via extensive simulations. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2112.12883 |