Fundamentals of base station availability in cellular networks with energy harvesting
2013
We develop a new tractable model for K-tier cellular networks, where each base station (BS) is solely powered by a self-contained energy harvesting module instead of a conventional power-line source. 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 its load is served by the neighboring BSs that are ON. Using tools from random walk theory and stochastic geometry, we characterize the fraction of time each type of BS can be kept ON, termed availability, for general uncoordinated strategies, where each BS toggles its ON/OFF state independently of the others. As a part of our analysis, we model the temporal dynamics of the energy level at each BS as a birth-death process, derive energy utilization rate for each BS class, and use hitting/stopping time analysis to study availabilities. We prove that there is a fundamental limit on the availabilities, which cannot be surpassed by any uncoordinated strategy. As a part of the proof, we construct the strategy that achieves this limit.
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