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Fractional Frequency Reuse (FFR) is one of the key concepts for mitigating inter-cell interference and improving cell-edge performance in OFDMA networks. The standard FFR scheme is intuitive and optimal for the hexagon-shaped cell pattern. In contrast, real-life OFDMA systems have very irregular cell layout, thus the number of surrounding cells and their respective interference vary significantly...
Fractional Frequency Reuse (FFR) is one of the key concepts for enhancing cell-edge performance of OFDMA networks. Standard FFR allows one sub-band to be allocated for each cell. This limits the performance improvement of cell edge users, especially those bandwidth-sensitive users. With flexible sub-band allocation, cell edge can be allocated more than one sub-band, thereby performance can be improved...
Soft frequency reuse (SFR) has been proposed for enhancing cell-edge performance in OFDMA networks. Previous studies of SFR have used simulations over rather small networks having hexagon-shaped cells. In this paper, we examine the expected performance gain of SFR for networks in realistic radio environments and with irregular cell patterns. We define a performance metric that allows for fast assessment...
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