In cellular device-to-device (D2D) communication networks, devices can communicate directly with each other without passing through base stations. Access control is an important function of radio resource management which aims to reduce frequency collision and mitigate interference between user’s connections. In this paper, we propose a cluster-based access control (CBAC) mechanism for heterogeneous cellular D2D communication networks with dense device deployment where both the macro base station and smallcell base stations (SBSs) coexist. In the proposed CBAC mechanism, relied on monitoring interference from its neighboring SBSs, each SBS firstly selects their operating bandwidth parts. Then, it jointly allocates channels and assigns transmission power to smallcell user equipments (SUEs) for their uplink transmissions and users using D2D communications to mitigate their interference to uplink transmissions of macrocell user equipments (MUEs). Through computer simulations, numerical results show that the proposed CBAC mechanism can provide higher network throughput as well as user throughput than those of the network-assisted devicedecided scheme proposed in the literature. Simulation results also show that SINR of uplink transmissions of MUEs and D2D communications managed by the MBS can be significantly improved.
CITATION STYLE
Do, T. D., Nguyen, N. T., Dang, T. H. G., Nguyen, N. H., & Pham, M. T. (2021). Cluster-based Access Control Mechanism for Cellular D2D Communication Networks with Dense Device Deployment. International Journal of Advanced Computer Science and Applications, 12(2), 803–810. https://doi.org/10.14569/IJACSA.2021.01202101
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