WO2015112780A1 - Adaptive cca and tx power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks - Google Patents

Adaptive cca and tx power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2015112780A1
WO2015112780A1 PCT/US2015/012556 US2015012556W WO2015112780A1 WO 2015112780 A1 WO2015112780 A1 WO 2015112780A1 US 2015012556 W US2015012556 W US 2015012556W WO 2015112780 A1 WO2015112780 A1 WO 2015112780A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
spatial
level
power
stations
detected
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2015/012556
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
James June-Ming Wang
Jianhan Liu
Yung-Ping Hsu
Ching-Hwa Yu
Original Assignee
Mediatek Singapore Pte. Ltd.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Mediatek Singapore Pte. Ltd. filed Critical Mediatek Singapore Pte. Ltd.
Publication of WO2015112780A1 publication Critical patent/WO2015112780A1/en
Priority to US15/019,849 priority Critical patent/US9820162B2/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L12/00Data switching networks
    • H04L12/64Hybrid switching systems
    • H04L12/6418Hybrid transport
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/04TPC
    • H04W52/38TPC being performed in particular situations
    • H04W52/50TPC being performed in particular situations at the moment of starting communication in a multiple access environment
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/04TPC
    • H04W52/18TPC being performed according to specific parameters
    • H04W52/24TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters
    • H04W52/241TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters taking into account channel quality metrics, e.g. SIR, SNR, CIR, Eb/lo
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/04TPC
    • H04W52/18TPC being performed according to specific parameters
    • H04W52/24TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters
    • H04W52/242TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters taking into account path loss
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/04TPC
    • H04W52/18TPC being performed according to specific parameters
    • H04W52/24TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters
    • H04W52/243TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters taking into account interferences
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/04TPC
    • H04W52/18TPC being performed according to specific parameters
    • H04W52/24TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters
    • H04W52/243TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters taking into account interferences
    • H04W52/244Interferences in heterogeneous networks, e.g. among macro and femto or pico cells or other sector / system interference [OSI]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/04TPC
    • H04W52/18TPC being performed according to specific parameters
    • H04W52/24TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters
    • H04W52/247TPC being performed according to specific parameters using SIR [Signal to Interference Ratio] or other wireless path parameters where the output power of a terminal is based on a path parameter sent by another terminal

Definitions

  • TECHNICAL FIELD relate generally to wireless network communications, and, more particularly, to adaptive Clear Channel Assessment (CCA) and transmit (TX) power level adjustment for dense deployment in wireless communications systems.
  • CCA Clear Channel Assessment
  • TX transmit
  • IEEE 802.11 is a set of media access control (MAC) and physical layer (PHY) specification for implementing wireless local area network (WLAN) communication, called WiFi, in the unlicensed (2.4, 3.6, 5, and 60 GHz) frequency bands.
  • the standards and amendments provide the basis for wireless network products using the WiFi frequency bands .
  • IEEE 802.11ac is a wireless networking standard in the 802.11 family providing high-throughput WLANs on the 5 GHz band. Significant wider channel bandwidths (20MHz, 40MHz, 80MHz, and 160MHz) were proposed in the IEEE 802.11ac standard.
  • the High Efficiency WLAN study group (HEW SG) is a study group within IEEE 802.11 working group that will consider the improvement of spectrum efficiency to enhance the system throughput in high-density scenarios of wireless devices. Because of HEW SG, TGax (an IEEE task group) was formed and tasked to work on IEEE 802.11ax standard that will become a successor to IEEE 802.11ac.
  • a transmitter of a BSS (basis service set) of certain bandwidth is allowed to transmit radio signals onto the shared wireless medium depending on clear channel assessment (CCA) sensing and a deferral or backoff procedure for channel access contention.
  • CCA clear channel assessment
  • a valid transmission sub-channel shall have bandwidth, allowable in the IEEE 802. llac , equal to or smaller than the full bandwidth of the BSS and contains the designated primary sub-channel of the BSS.
  • the transmitter is allowed to transmit in any of the valid transmission sub-channels as long as the CCA indicates the sub-channel (or full channel) is idle.
  • This dynamic transmission bandwidth scheme allows system bandwidth resource to be efficiently utilized.
  • An enhanced distributed channel access protocol is used in IEEE 802. llac as a channel contention procedure for wireless devices to gain access to the shared wireless medium, e.g., to obtain a transmitting opportunity (TXOP) for transmitting radio signals onto the shared wireless medium.
  • TXOP transmitting opportunity
  • the simple CSMA/CA with random back-off contention scheme and low cost ad hoc deployment in unlicensed spectrum have contributed rapid adoption of WiFi systems.
  • the EDCA TXOP is based solely on activity of the primary channel, while the transmit channel width determination is based on the secondary channel CCA during an interval (PIFS) immediately preceding the start of the TXOP .
  • PIFS interval
  • the basic assumption of EDCA is that a packet collision can occur if a device transmits signal under the channel busy condition when the received signal level is higher than CCA level.
  • CCA level -82dBm
  • the OBSS interference is substantially below the required noise level.
  • CCA level -82dBm
  • the operating SNR is still above the level required for max MCS.
  • the specific link throughput does not degrade, but CCA deferral is reduced (likelihood of channel access increased) leading to increased network throughput.
  • the network throughput increases until CCA level (OBSS interference) reaches the SNR for max MCS. Above that level, the individual link MCS degradation is to be balanced with increased likelihood of channel access (from increasing the CCA level) .
  • raising CCA level can introduce more collision in the networks. It also increases device power consumption due to retries and is unfair to legacy stations since they still use the baseline CCA level.
  • Similar network throughput increase can be achieved in some dense deployment scenario by lowering the transmit power of all stations (STAs) , which also reduces power consumption.
  • STAs stations
  • legacy and IEEE 802.11ax STAs co-exist in the same environment, only reducing the transmit power of the IEEE 802.11ax STAs can lead to their performance degradation. This is because legacy STAs transmission might not deter for reduced transmit power IEEE 802.11ax STAs (when the received signal falls below the CCA of legacy STAs) , but not vice versa.
  • IEEE 802.11ax STAs In order to entice IEEE 802.11ax STAs to perform TPC, it is necessary to also allow it to increase its CCA.
  • an IEEE 802.11ax STA increases its channel access (i.e., higher CCA) but also reduces its transmit power level (lower transmit power) such that it does not cause collision.
  • a method of spatial re-use with TPC and adaptive CCA is proposed.
  • a wireless station detects spatial re-use information associated with other inter-BSS stations having an ongoing frame exchange.
  • the spatial re-use information comprises a TX spectral density (power/Hz) and received signal or interference information of each inter-BSS station.
  • the wireless STA determines a TX spectral density based on the detected spatial re-use information.
  • the wireless STA then adapts it CCA level that allows it to contend the medium for spatial re-use transmission opportunity (TXOP) with other wireless station attempting spatial re-use.
  • TXOP spatial re-use transmission opportunity
  • the wireless STA starts a spatial re-use frame exchange with the intra-BSS peer station using the determined TX spectral density such that the spatial re-use frame exchange does not interfere with the ongoing frame exchange of the inter-BSS stations.
  • the wireless STA spatially reuse the medium without causing collision and interference to OBSS stations and thus increases network throughput .
  • the received signal or interference information comprises a received signal strength indicator (RSSI) , a received interference level, or the adjusted CCA level, optionally scaled by a signal bandwidth.
  • the spatial re-use information further comprises a BSS color of the inter-BSS stations (which identifies the station's BSS) , and a remaining TXOP of the ongoing frame exchange such that the spatial re-use TXOP is set to be less than or equal to the remaining TXOP of the ongoing frame exchange.
  • Figure 1 illustrates a wireless network having overlapping BSS (OBSS) with spatial re-use in accordance with one novel aspect .
  • OBSS overlapping BSS
  • Figure 2 is a simplified block diagram of as initiating device and a responding device in accordance with one novel aspect.
  • Figure 3 illustrates a method flow of a wireless device performing spatial re-use frame exchange in a wireless network .
  • Figure 4 illustrates a preferred embodiment of transmit power control and adaptive CCA level for spatial re-use with HEW stations.
  • Figure 5 illustrates another embodiment of transmit power control and adaptive CCA level based on RSSI for spatial re-use with legacy stations.
  • Figures 6 illustrates one embodiment of spatial re-use with excessive margin.
  • Figure 7 illustrates a processing flow of spatial re-use in accordance with one novel aspect.
  • Figure 8 illustrates spatial re-use and corresponding frame exchange with fair TXOP duration and EDCA rules.
  • Figure 9 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with uplink (UL) OFDMA.
  • Figure 10 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with beamformed transmission.
  • Figure 11 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with different channel width.
  • Figure 12 is a flow chart of a method of spatial re-use with TPC and adaptive CCA in accordance with one novel aspect.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a wireless network 100 having overlapping basic service set (OBSS) with spatial re-use in accordance with one novel aspect.
  • Wireless network 100 comprises a plurality of wireless stations 111 (STA1) , 112 (STA2) , 113 (STA3) , and 114 (STA4) .
  • Each station can be an access point station (AP-STA) , or a non-AP-STA.
  • STA1 and STA2 belong to a first BSS1 having STA2 as an access point (AP)
  • STA3 and STA4 belong to a second BSS2 having STA4 as an access point (AP) .
  • BSS1 and BSS2 are overlapping BSS (OBSS) with overlapping coverages.
  • STA1 and STA2 have gained the access to the wireless medium and have ongoing frame exchange between them. Meanwhile, STA3 is trying to initiate a frame exchange with STA4.
  • an enhanced distributed channel access protocol is used as a channel contention procedure for wireless devices to gain access to the shared wireless medium, e.g., to obtain a transmitting opportunity (TXOP) for transmitting radio signals onto the shared wireless medium.
  • TXOP transmitting opportunity
  • the primary channel is BUSY of one of the predefined conditions is met based on Clear Channel Assessment (CCA) sensitivity levels .
  • CCA Clear Channel Assessment
  • the transmit channel width is selected based on the secondary channel CCA during an interval (PIFS) immediately preceding the start of TXOP.
  • the secondary channel is BUSY if one of the predefined conditions is met based on CCA levels .
  • IEEE 802.11ac is a wireless networking standard in the 802.11 family providing high-throughput WLANs on the 5 GHz band.
  • the High Efficiency WLAN study group (HEW SG) is a study group within IEEE 802.11 working group that will consider the improvement of spectrum efficiency to enhance the system throughput in high-density scenarios of wireless devices. Because of HEW SG, TGax (an IEEE task group) was formed and tasked to work on IEEE 802.11ax standard that will become a successor to IEEE 802.11ac.
  • a solution based on transmit power control (TPC) and adaptive CCA level is provided 1) to increase the spatial re-use without causing collision; 2) to maintain fairness between stations in different BSSs; 3) to maintain fairness between HEW stations and legacy stations; and 4) to maintain power efficiency .
  • TPC transmit power control
  • FIG. 1 if STA3 wants to establish a link with STA4 without interfering with STA1/STA2 with spatial re-use, it requires several
  • STA1/STA2 link is an inter-BSS link or an intra-BSS link; 2) STA3 should not cause interference to STA1 and STA2 , e.g., radio signal 121 does not interfere STA1 and radio signal 122 does not interfere STA2 ; and 3) STA4 should not cause interference to STA1 and STA2 , e.g., radio signal 123 does not interfere STA1 and radio signal 124 does not interfere STA4.
  • STA3 the initiating STA
  • STA4 the responding STA
  • the pre-condition 3 might not be satisfied .
  • STA4 transmission results in collision it is called the hidden node problem. Skipping the
  • pre-condition 3 results in simpler procedure at the expense of higher chance of collision. Additionally, pre-condition 2) might only be partially satisfied, i.e., STA3 might cause interference to one of STA1 or STA2.
  • TPC and adaptive CCA is applied by STA3 and/or STA4 to satisfy the preconditions for spatial re-use and thereby increasing network throughput.
  • Figure 2 is a simplified block diagram of an initiating device 201 and a responding device 211 in a wireless network
  • 201 comprises memory 202, a processor 203, a control and configuration module 204, a power controller 205, an EDCA module 206, a spatial re-use detection module 207, and a transceiver 208 coupled to antenna 209.
  • responding device 211 comprises memory 212, a processor 213, a control and configuration module 214, a power controller 215, an EDCA module 216, a spatial re-use detection module 217, and a transceiver 218 coupled to antenna 219.
  • the transceiver converts received baseband signals from the processor to RF signals and sends out to the antenna.
  • the processor processes the received baseband signals from the transceiver and invoke different functional modules to be configured to perform various features supported by the wireless devices.
  • the different modules are functional modules that can be implemented in software, firmware, hardware, or any combination thereof.
  • the function modules when executed by processors 203 and 213 (via program instructions 209 and 219 contained in memory 202 and 212) , interwork with each other to allow the wireless devices to perform channel access with spatial re-use.
  • the spatial re-use detection module observe the wireless medium to confirm that it is allowed to start a spatial re-use frame exchange 231, the EDCA module contends the wireless medium for spatial re-use with other STAs through a random backoff EDCA procedure, the control and configuration module performs various control and configuration functionalities, and the power control module determines and controls a transmit (TX) power level (or TX spectral power density) such that spatial re-use frame exchange 231 does not cause collision in the network.
  • TX transmit
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a method flow of a wireless device performing spatial re-use frame exchange in a wireless network.
  • the wireless network comprises a plurality of stations STA1 , STA2 , STA3 , and STA4.
  • step 311 STA1 and STA2 have gained a TXOP to access the wireless medium and have ongoing frame exchange between them.
  • STA3 is trying to initiate a frame exchange with STA4 by exploiting spatial re-use of the wireless medium.
  • step 331 STA3 performs spatial observation of the wireless medium and update its database for spatial re-use purpose. Note that spatial observation is an optional step and can occur during a long-term or a short-term moving observation window before the actual spatial re-use frame exchange.
  • step 332 STA3 performs spatial re-use detection and observes the on-going frame exchange in the wireless medium to confirm whether STA3 is allowed to start a spatial re-use frame exchange.
  • STA3 applies TPC with adaptive CCA level in determining its TX power level .
  • STA3 decides whether its TX power level is sufficient to close the link with STA4 based on its prior experience or observation. If there is not sufficient margin to close the link, STA3 abandons its attempt for spatial re-use based on current spatial detection. If STA3 has sufficient link margin, it then raises its CCA level based on the observed signal (power density) level from STA1 and STA2 such that it can perform EDCA backoff procedure.
  • STA3 performs an EDCA backoff procedure to contend the wireless medium with other spatial re-use STAs for spatial re-use frame exchange with STA4.
  • step 334 STA3 gains a spatial re-use TXOP and starts frame exchange with STA4.
  • STA4 is engaging in spatial observation when it receives a spatial re-use packet from STA3.
  • STA4 applies TPC in determining its TX power level when it transmits a response to STA3.
  • Figure 4 illustrates a preferred embodiment of transmit power control (TPC) and adaptive CCA level for spatial re-use with HEW stations .
  • TPC transmit power control
  • STAl and STA2 have ongoing frame exchange in BSS1
  • STA3 applies TPC to ensure that any spatial re-use frame exchange in BSS2 will not causing interference to STAl and to STA2.
  • STAl and STA2 signal their transmit power level (TX-PWR_STA1 and TX-PWR_STA2) and their received signal strength indicator (RSSI) from the peer.
  • TX-PWR allows a receiver (e.g., STA3) to determine the pathloss .
  • STA3 TX-PWR_STA1 - RSSI (by STA3 from STAl) .
  • the pathloss between STA2 and STA3 TX-PWR_STA2 - RSSI (by STA3 from STA2) .
  • TPC TX power level
  • Pathloss (STA2-3) TX-PWR_STA2 - RSSI (by STA3 from STA2) ;
  • TPC1 pathloss (STA1-3) ⁇ RSSI (by STAl from STA2) -
  • TPC2 pathloss (STA2-3) ⁇ RSSI (by STA2 from STAl) - Fixed Margin.
  • TPC1 or TPC2 only one of the two in-equality (TPC1 or TPC2) needs to be satisfied if the STA3 only observes transmission of one of STAl or STA2.
  • the fixed margin e.g., 20 dB, is required for signal to noise ratio (SNR) for operating certain MCS (Modulation and coding scheme) . If STA3 cannot close the link with STA4 , then STA3 should abandon its transmission. In some situations, STA3 does not receive either STA1 or STA2 signal. In this case, only one transmit power level (TPC1 or TPC2) obtained from the received signal is used.
  • TPC1 or TPC2 transmit power level
  • STA1 and STA2 might be operating at certain interference level from other links (which is above the noise level) .
  • a more precise estimation of the TX power level for STA3 can be obtained if STA1 and STA2 directly signal their received interference level , or their adjusted CCA level .
  • STA3 can then determine its TX power level based on the following equations for STA1 and STA2 respectively and select the lower TX power level between TPC1 and TPC2 such that STA3 would not cause interference to both STA1 and STA2.
  • TPC1 - Pathloss STA1 received interference level_STAl - error margin
  • TPC2 - Pathloss STA2 received interference level_STA2 - error margin
  • TPC1 - Pathloss STA1 adjusted CCA level_STAl error margin
  • TPC1 or TPC2 only one of the two in-equality (TPC1 or TPC2) needs to be satisfied if the STA3 only observes transmission of one of STA1 or STA2.
  • the error margin e.g. , 5 dB, is applied to accommodate error.
  • the adjusted CCA level of STA3 is equal to the received interference (+noise) level at STA3. If STA3 cannot close the link with STA4 , then STA3 should abandon its transmission. In some situations, the STA3 does not receive either STA1 or STA2 signal . In this case, only one transmit power level (TPC1 or TPC2) obtained from the received signal is used.
  • TPC1 or TPC2 transmit power level
  • STA3 In addition to transmit power level (TX-PWR) , RSSI from peer, received interference level, adjusted CCA level, additional information is required by STA3 from STA1 and STA2 for spatial re-use purpose.
  • STA3 needs to identify whether the STA1/STA2 link is an inter-BSS link or an intra-BSS link. In order to do that, STA1 and STA2 should signal their BSS color, or TX IDs and RX IDs.
  • a BSS color is a shortened indication (e.g., a 3-5 bits indication) of BSS ID, which is chosen by an AP based on its observation of BSS colors of overlapping neighbor BSSs.
  • STA3 needs to know the remaining TXOP duration of the ongoing STA1-STA2 frame exchange so that STA3 can gain a spatial re-use TXOP that is fair to other legacy STAs. Further details of the spatial re-use TXOP duration will be explained later with respect to Figure 8.
  • the spatial re-use STAs calculate space loss to STA1 and STA2 and adjust their transmit power to be below the received interference-margin of STA1 and STA2 to avoid collision.
  • TPC and adaptive CCA can avoid the collision during spatial re-use.
  • spatial re-use STAs do not have the information to adjust their transmit power level . This is because legacy STAs do not signal their transmit power and received interference , CCA, or RSSI from peer . Therefore, a different TPC should be used in a mixed environment with legacy STAs .
  • Figure 5 illustrates another embodiment of transmit power control and adaptive CCA level based on RSSI for spatial re-use with legacy stations.
  • legacy STA1 and STA2 have ongoing frame exchange, and HEW STA3 applies TPC to ensure that any spatial re-use frame exchange will not causing interference to STA1 and to STA2.
  • STA1 and STA2 in Figure 5 are legacy STAs, they do not signal their TX-PWR, another TPC is proposed for STA3 that is based on the RSSI and signal bandwidth from STA1 and STA2.
  • the basic assumptions here are 1) the received interference level is at the CCA of the legacy STA, and 2) the transmit power (i.e.
  • TX-PWR_Ref TX-PWR_Ref
  • CCI MAX (Received PWR_STA1, Received PWR_STA2) - CCA
  • TPC TX-PWR_Ref - CCI - margin
  • a reference transmit power level TX-PWR_Ref and the baseline CCA level at CCA_baseline are defined.
  • STA3 intending to access the medium, receives a signal from STA1 with a power level RX-PWR STA1 exceeding CCA and/or receives a signal from STA2 with a power level RX-PWR STA2 exceeding CCA.
  • Figures 6 illustrates one embodiment of spatial re-use with excessive margin in a wireless network 600.
  • STA1 and STA2 have ongoing frame exchange, and STA3 is trying to initiate spatial re-use frame exchange with other STAs.
  • STA1 has excess margin M_rx in the received link.
  • the excess margin is defined as the difference between the received SNR and the required SNR when highest MCS is being used.
  • STA1 can allow other OBSS spatial re-use STAs (e.g., STA3) more room for spatial re-use by: 1) signaling M_rx to other spatial re-use STAs, which allows OBSS STAs to have higher spatial re-use TPC; 2) lowering its own TPC to reduce interference to OBSS STAs, and 3) signaling an artificially raised received interference level or adjusted CCA to a higher level corresponding to M_rx, which allows OBSS STAs to have higher spatial re-use TPC.
  • STA3 OBSS spatial re-use STAs
  • the spatial re-use STA4 in response to STA3 signal should adjust its transmit power based on information received or received RSSI in the frame exchange signals of STA1 and STA2 immediately prior to STA3 ' s transmission of spatial re-use signal .
  • FIG. 7 illustrates a processing flow of spatial re-use in accordance with one novel aspect .
  • spatial re-use STA3 performs a four-step spatial re-use procedure to be able to have spatial re-use frame exchange while OBSS STA1 and STA2 have ongoing frame exchange.
  • the four steps are spatial observation, spatial re-use detection, spatial contention, and spatial re-use frame exchange .
  • STA3 observes the medium and constantly updates its database prior to frame exchange.
  • STA maintains a long-term moving window for a medium activity database.
  • STA3 monitors medium activity, e.g., frame exchange between STAl and STA2 and updates its database.
  • the database information obtained from information signaled by STAs, observed RSSIs , BSS color, etc.
  • the spatial observation allows STA3 to form a decision of what transmit power level to use during spatial re-use, and to determine whether the recipient STA is nearby or not when a nearby STA sends a frame. Note the TPC based on the long-term spatial observation is overly conservative since most of neighbor STAs observed might not be active during the spatial re-use frame exchange.
  • STA3 wants to initiate a frame exchange and therefore detects ongoing frame exchange in the medium to confirm that it is allowed to start a spatial re-use frame exchange . Since a pair of STAs (STAl and STA2) are doing frame exchange, both STAl and STA2 need to be taken into considerations during the spatial re-use detection. In order for STA3 not to interfere with both STAl and STA2 , STA3 observes the medium and performs spatial re-use detection. Spatial re-use detection mandates STA3 to observe the medium for a duration (e.g., T2) during which both STAl and STA2 transmit PPDU.
  • a duration e.g., T2
  • STA3 determines a first transmit power that would not cause interference to STAl, a second transmit power that would not cause interference to STA2 , and then selects the lower transmit power so that the spatial re-use frame exchange would not interfere both STAl and STA2.
  • STA3 might only receive signal from one of STAl or STA2 during spatial detection.
  • STA3 should also collects spatial re-use information such as BSS color, received interference level or received RSSI or adjusted CCA, remaining TXOP duration from STA1 and STA2.
  • a spatial re-use STA4 should also observes the medium and the spatial re-use information collected immediately prior to receiving a signal from STA3 is used to determine its transmit power level .
  • STA3 contends the medium for spatial re-use with other STAs .
  • STA3 decides whether to initiate a spatial re-use frame exchange based on if it can close the link .
  • STA3 shall perform a backoff procedure (e.g., EDCA procedure) during time T3 to prevent collision with other spatial re-use stations.
  • STA3 spatial re-use backoff procedure should be independent from non- spatial -reuse backoff procedures that are not invoked by the adaptive CCA. This is to ensure fairness to legacy STAs, because legacy STAs do not participate in the spatial re-use EDCA.
  • the spatial re-use EDCA cannot be used to change the back off counter of the EDCA that employs fixed legacy CCA levels. It is important that all spatial re-use STA use the same procedure to determine when to start spatial re-use backoff procedure to ensure all spatial re-use STAs compete equally and avoids collision among the spatial re-use STAs.
  • STA3 starts a spatial re-use frame exchange by transmitting a frame to its intended recipient station (e.g., STA4) .
  • STA3 gains spatial re-use TXOP and starts frame exchange with its peer station (e.g., STA4) during time T4.
  • STA4 is a legacy STA
  • STA3 shall start with a request to send (RTS) transmission to avoid STA4 interfering with STA1/STA2 or any other OBSS STAs in proximity to STA4.
  • Legacy STA will not respond with clear to send (CTS) if its NAV is not zero.
  • CTS clear to send
  • Spatial re-use STA4 adopts the CCA and TX power level adjustment rules for spatial re-use when it responds to STA3. STA4 should determine whether it could respond and adjust its TX power level based on the spatial re-use information it receives during spatial observation of ongoing medium activities prior to STA3 ' s transmission, the prior or observed link margin with STA3. STA4 determines its TX power level the same way as STA3 based on its received or observed spatial re-use information.
  • Figure 8 illustrates spatial re-use and corresponding frame exchange with a fair TXOP duration and EDCA rules in a mixed wireless network with both legacy stations and spatial re-use stations.
  • API STA1 and STA2 belong to a first BSS1
  • spatial re-use STA3 belongs to a second BSS2.
  • STA1 and API engages in an ongoing frame exchange.
  • Spatial re-use STA3 initiates a spatial re-use frame exchange with other stations in BSS2 (e.g. , another STA, STA4 , not shown) .
  • BSS2 e.g. , another STA, STA4 , not shown
  • STA2 is a legacy station, and its NAV setting is non-zero from time tO to tl due to the ongoing frame exchange between STA1 and API.
  • the spatial re-use frame exchange duration (TXOP) should be limited to the original NAV setting between STA1 and API .
  • the spatial re-use transmission shall end before time tl so that it will not cause STA2 NAV to be extended to time t2.
  • STA2 can resume medium contention from time tl .
  • STA1 and API can signal the remaining TXOP duration. For example, they signal the remaining duration from a reference time epoch in the packet such as at the end of the preamble or end of the packet transmission.
  • the OBSS non-AP spatial re-use STA or OBSS spatial re-use AP may initiate a spatial re-use exchange after a spatial re-use Backoff.
  • the spatial re-use Backoff is initialized with pre-defined EDCA parameters or from the most recently received spatial re-use EDCA parameter set element sent by the AP with which the STA is associated.
  • the spatial re-use Backoff is initialized with the spatial re-use EDCA parameters
  • the spatial re-use Backoff function begins or resumes when the spatial detection is performed.
  • the spatial re-use Backoff function is independent of all other legacy backoff functions but follows the similar EDCAF backoff procedure.
  • An OBSS non-AP spatial re-use STA or OBSS spatial re-use AP that invokes or resumes a spatial re-use Backoff at the confirmation of a spatial re-use condition shall set a spatial re-use timer to NAV or based on spatial re-use information such as received remaining TXOP duration and reset its NAV and suspend EDCAF backoff procedures.
  • An OBSS non-AP spatial re-use STA or OBSS spatial re-use AP that initiates a new spatially re-use frame exchange after a spatial re-use Backoff procedure shall start the exchange with RTS/CTS when transmitting to a legacy STA or start with regular frame when transmitting to another spatial re-use STA and shall limit the duration of the exchange such that it ends before the expiry of the spatial re-use timer.
  • the STA shall obey the TXOP limit of the AC of the frames transmitted within the spatial re-use frame exchange or the remaining TXOP duration received during spatial detection.
  • An STA that transmits a spatial re-use frame exchange may transmit additional spatial re-use frame exchanges by continuing to use the spatial re-use Backoff function until the expiry of the spatial re-use timer. If the ongoing frame exchange transmission is between a pair of STAs within its BSS (with matching BSS color) , the STA does not reset its NAV even though the Spatially Re-use conditions are met.
  • FIG. 9 illustrates an example of OFDMA operation.
  • One mode of Uplink (UL) OFDMA operation starts with API transmitting a trigger frame and multiple STAs (STA1-STA3) transmit UL OFDMA signals which occupy a fraction of the channel bandwidth.
  • STAs in response to AP signal, might not perform CCA before their uplink transmission and STAs have high transmit power density (narrow band signal) , it is expected that STAs' signals may propagate farther than APs signal . Additionally, STAs' transmission duration can be shorter than TXOP. Therefore, it is more difficult to perform spatial observation or spatial re-use detection for UL OFDMA.
  • an OBSS spatial re-use STA can use the aggregate received power and aggregate received interference from these OFDMA STAs to adapt its CCA level and determine its transmit power adjustment. In another embodiment, an OBSS spatial re-use STA can use the
  • max-received power from all the OFDMA STAs to adapt its CCA and adjust its TX power to be below minimum received interference of all OFDMA STAs .
  • no spatial re-use is applied if UL OFDMA is used.
  • AP-to-AP coordination is required for UL OFDMA to mitigate OBSS interference based on some pre-determined procedure.
  • Figure 10 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with beamformed transmission.
  • STA with spatial reciprocity it can employ beamforming during spatial re-use detection.
  • Spatial reciprocity is a device capability of transmitting and receiving with the same antenna pattern that could be synthesized with multiple antennas.
  • STA1 and STA2 engages in an ongoing frame exchange in BSS1.
  • Spatial re-use STA3 can perform spatial detection under beamformed condition.
  • proper beamforming antenna setting 1013 can be used to suppress the received power fromSTAl and/orSTA2 or to enhance link margin with STA4 during spatial detection and spatial re-use frame exchange.
  • spatial re-use STA3 initiates a spatial re-use frame exchange with STA4 in BSS2.
  • STA3 performs a spatial detection with radio signals 1011 and 1012 from STA1 and STA2 via spatially reciprocal beamforming. If STA3 cannot hear from STA1 and STA2 using a beamformed antenna pattern 1013 for receiving, then the radio signals transmitted from the spatially reciprocal device STA3 do not interfere STA1 and STA2 if STA3 applies with the same beamformed antenna pattern 1013.
  • the same adaptive CCA and transmit power adjustment procedure can be applied to the spatially reciprocal beamforming STAs for spatial re-use.
  • Proper beamforming in conjunction with the proposed TPC and adaptive CCA can enhance the spatial re-use by suppressing STA1 and/or STA2 signal level and/or enhancing link robustness and quality between STA3 and STA4.
  • Figure 11 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with different channel widths.
  • the signal propagation range is determined by the spectral density (power/Hz) instead of the signal power level.
  • the baseline (primary channel) CCA levels are based on equal spectral density for all RX channel widths.
  • the CCA level/channel width (in unit of 20MHz) is equal to -82dBm, -79 dBm, -76 dBm, -73 dBm for any 20MHz, 40MHz, 80MHz, and 160MHz RX channels, respectively.
  • the TX spectral density is not the same for all TX channel widths.
  • the TX spectral density of a narrower TX channel is typically higher than the TX spectral density of a wider TX channel, e.g., TX_PWR/20M > TX_PWR/40M > TX_PWR/80M > TX_PWR/160M.
  • TX_PWR/20M > TX_PWR/40M > TX_PWR/80M > TX_PWR/160M e.g., TX_PWR/20M > TX_PWR/40M > TX_PWR/80M > TX_PWR/160M.
  • TX-PWR should be scaled to provide equal TX spectral density.
  • These transmit power level is determined based on the received power density level (received RSSI scaled by signal bandwidth from legacy STAs) or the received interference power density level or adjusted CCA level scaled by the signal bandwidth received from spatial re-use STA.
  • the signaled TX power level should be adjusted by bandwidth. This resolves the issue of narrower width transmission interfering or deferring a wider width transmission. The likelihood of the wider channel
  • an STA follow the following modified EDCA channel access: a) Transmit a 160MHz or 80+80MHZ mask PPDU at the power level P if the secondary channel, the secondary 40MHz channel and the secondary 80MHz channel were idle during an interval of PIFS immediately preceding the start of the TXOP; b) Transmit an 80MHz mask PPDU at the power level P-3dB on the primary 80MHz channel if the secondary channel and the secondary 40MHz channel were idle during an interval of PIFS immediately preceding the start of the TXOP; c) Transmit a 40MHz mask PPDU at a power level P-6dB on the primary 40MHz channel if the secondary channel was idle during an interval of PIFS immediately preceding the start of the TXOP; d) Transmit a 20MHz mask PPDU at a power level P-9dB on the primary 20MHz channel; and e) Restart the channel
  • FIG 12 is a flow chart of a method of spatial re-use with TPC and adaptive CCA in accordance with one novel aspect .
  • a spatial re-use station detects spatial re-use information associated with other peer stations belong to an inter-BSS or overlapping BSS .
  • the inter-BSS peer stations engage an ongoing frame exchange.
  • the spatial re-use information comprises a TX spectral density (power/Hz) and received signal or interference information of each inter-BSS peer station.
  • the spatial re-use STA determines a TX spectral density based on the detected spatial re-use information.
  • the spatial re-use STA contends the medium for spatial re-use transmission opportunity (TXOP) with an intra-BSS peer station.
  • the spatial re-use STA starts a spatial re-use frame exchange with the intra-BSS peer station using the determined TX spectral density such that the spatial re-use frame exchange does not interfere with the ongoing frame exchange.
  • TX spectral density By adjusting the TX spectral density, the spatial re-use STA adapts its CCA level to spatially reuse the medium without causing collision and interference to OBSS stations and thus increases network throughput .

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)

Abstract

A method of spatial re-use with TPC and adaptive CCA is proposed. A spatial re-use station detects spatial re-use information associated with other peer OBSS stations. The spatial re-use information includes a TX spectral density (power/Hz) and received signal or interference information of each inter-BSS peer station. The spatial re-use STA determines a TX spectral density based on the detected spatial re-use information. The spatial re-use STA then contends the medium for spatial re-use transmission opportunity (TXOP) with an intra-BSS peer station. Finally, the spatial re-use STA starts spatial re-use frame exchange with the intra-BSS peer station using the determined TX spectral density. By adjusting the TX spectral density, the spatial re-use STA adapts its CCA level to spatially reuse the medium without causing collision and interference to OBSS stations and thus increases network throughput.

Description

ADAPTIVE CCA AND TX POWER LEVEL ADJUSTMENT FOR
DENSE DEPLOYMENT OF WIRELESS NETWORKS
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims priority under 35 U. S . C . §119 from U.S. Provisional Application Number 61/931 , 080 , entitled "Dynamic CCA and TX Power LEVEL ADJUSTMENT for Dense
Deployment of Wireless Networks," filed on January 24, 2014; U.S. Provisional Application Number 61/932,324, entitled "Dynamic CCA and TX Power LEVEL ADJUSTMENT for Dense
Deployment of Wireless Networks," filed on January 28, 2014; U.S. Provisional Application Number 61/937,719, entitled "Dynamic CCA and TX Power Level Adjustment for Dense
Deployment of Wireless Networks," filed on February 10, 2014; the subject matter of which is incorporated herein by reference .
TECHNICAL FIELD The disclosed embodiments relate generally to wireless network communications, and, more particularly, to adaptive Clear Channel Assessment (CCA) and transmit (TX) power level adjustment for dense deployment in wireless communications systems.
BACKGROUND
IEEE 802.11 is a set of media access control (MAC) and physical layer (PHY) specification for implementing wireless local area network (WLAN) communication, called WiFi, in the unlicensed (2.4, 3.6, 5, and 60 GHz) frequency bands. The standards and amendments provide the basis for wireless network products using the WiFi frequency bands . For example , IEEE 802.11ac is a wireless networking standard in the 802.11 family providing high-throughput WLANs on the 5 GHz band. Significant wider channel bandwidths (20MHz, 40MHz, 80MHz, and 160MHz) were proposed in the IEEE 802.11ac standard. The High Efficiency WLAN study group (HEW SG) is a study group within IEEE 802.11 working group that will consider the improvement of spectrum efficiency to enhance the system throughput in high-density scenarios of wireless devices. Because of HEW SG, TGax (an IEEE task group) was formed and tasked to work on IEEE 802.11ax standard that will become a successor to IEEE 802.11ac.
In IEEE 802.11ac, a transmitter of a BSS (basis service set) of certain bandwidth is allowed to transmit radio signals onto the shared wireless medium depending on clear channel assessment (CCA) sensing and a deferral or backoff procedure for channel access contention. For a BSS of certain bandwidth, a valid transmission sub-channel shall have bandwidth, allowable in the IEEE 802. llac , equal to or smaller than the full bandwidth of the BSS and contains the designated primary sub-channel of the BSS. Based on the CCA sensing in the valid transmission bandwidths, the transmitter is allowed to transmit in any of the valid transmission sub-channels as long as the CCA indicates the sub-channel (or full channel) is idle. This dynamic transmission bandwidth scheme allows system bandwidth resource to be efficiently utilized.
An enhanced distributed channel access protocol (EDCA) is used in IEEE 802. llac as a channel contention procedure for wireless devices to gain access to the shared wireless medium, e.g., to obtain a transmitting opportunity (TXOP) for transmitting radio signals onto the shared wireless medium. The simple CSMA/CA with random back-off contention scheme and low cost ad hoc deployment in unlicensed spectrum have contributed rapid adoption of WiFi systems. Typically, the EDCA TXOP is based solely on activity of the primary channel, while the transmit channel width determination is based on the secondary channel CCA during an interval (PIFS) immediately preceding the start of the TXOP . The basic assumption of EDCA is that a packet collision can occur if a device transmits signal under the channel busy condition when the received signal level is higher than CCA level.
Today, WiFi devices are over-populated. Dense deployment has led to significant issues such as interference, congestion, and low throughput. Raising CCA levels has been shown to increase spatial re-use, which leads to significant increase in the network throughput in some dense deployment scenarios. In dense deployment scenario with multiple small BSS footprints in which APs and non-AP STAs are mostly exchanging frames at the highest MCS (modulation and coding) , the baseline CCA level -82dBm leads to excessive deferral and thus lower overall throughput. For a specific link in the preceding scenario, the highest throughput is achieved approximately at an modified CCA level in which SNR for max MCS « received signal level / (OBSS interference + noise) , where OBSS interference * CCA level. Note that if CCA level = -82dBm, the OBSS interference is substantially below the required noise level. By increasing CCA level (OBSS interference) for all BSSs in the scenario, the operating SNR is still above the level required for max MCS. The specific link throughput does not degrade, but CCA deferral is reduced (likelihood of channel access increased) leading to increased network throughput. The network throughput increases until CCA level (OBSS interference) reaches the SNR for max MCS. Above that level, the individual link MCS degradation is to be balanced with increased likelihood of channel access (from increasing the CCA level) . In general, raising CCA level can introduce more collision in the networks. It also increases device power consumption due to retries and is unfair to legacy stations since they still use the baseline CCA level.
Similar network throughput increase can be achieved in some dense deployment scenario by lowering the transmit power of all stations (STAs) , which also reduces power consumption. However, when there are both legacy and IEEE 802.11ax STAs co-exist in the same environment, only reducing the transmit power of the IEEE 802.11ax STAs can lead to their performance degradation. This is because legacy STAs transmission might not deter for reduced transmit power IEEE 802.11ax STAs (when the received signal falls below the CCA of legacy STAs) , but not vice versa. In order to entice IEEE 802.11ax STAs to perform TPC, it is necessary to also allow it to increase its CCA. As a result, an IEEE 802.11ax STA increases its channel access (i.e., higher CCA) but also reduces its transmit power level (lower transmit power) such that it does not cause collision.
It is desirable to have a solution 1) to increase the spatial re-use without causing collision; 2) to maintain fairness between stations in different BSSs; 3) to maintain fairness between HEW stations and legacy stations; and 4) to maintain power efficiency.
SUMMARY
A method of spatial re-use with TPC and adaptive CCA is proposed. A wireless station detects spatial re-use information associated with other inter-BSS stations having an ongoing frame exchange. The spatial re-use information comprises a TX spectral density (power/Hz) and received signal or interference information of each inter-BSS station. The wireless STA determines a TX spectral density based on the detected spatial re-use information. The wireless STA then adapts it CCA level that allows it to contend the medium for spatial re-use transmission opportunity (TXOP) with other wireless station attempting spatial re-use. Finally, the wireless STA starts a spatial re-use frame exchange with the intra-BSS peer station using the determined TX spectral density such that the spatial re-use frame exchange does not interfere with the ongoing frame exchange of the inter-BSS stations. By adjusting the TX spectral density and adapting its CCA level, the wireless STA spatially reuse the medium without causing collision and interference to OBSS stations and thus increases network throughput .
In one embodiment, the received signal or interference information comprises a received signal strength indicator (RSSI) , a received interference level, or the adjusted CCA level, optionally scaled by a signal bandwidth. The spatial re-use information further comprises a BSS color of the inter-BSS stations (which identifies the station's BSS) , and a remaining TXOP of the ongoing frame exchange such that the spatial re-use TXOP is set to be less than or equal to the remaining TXOP of the ongoing frame exchange.
Other embodiments and advantages are described in the detailed description below. This summary does not purport to define the invention. The invention is defined by the claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Figure 1 illustrates a wireless network having overlapping BSS (OBSS) with spatial re-use in accordance with one novel aspect .
Figure 2 is a simplified block diagram of as initiating device and a responding device in accordance with one novel aspect. Figure 3 illustrates a method flow of a wireless device performing spatial re-use frame exchange in a wireless network .
Figure 4 illustrates a preferred embodiment of transmit power control and adaptive CCA level for spatial re-use with HEW stations.
Figure 5 illustrates another embodiment of transmit power control and adaptive CCA level based on RSSI for spatial re-use with legacy stations. Figures 6 illustrates one embodiment of spatial re-use with excessive margin.
Figure 7 illustrates a processing flow of spatial re-use in accordance with one novel aspect.
Figure 8 illustrates spatial re-use and corresponding frame exchange with fair TXOP duration and EDCA rules.
Figure 9 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with uplink (UL) OFDMA.
Figure 10 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with beamformed transmission.
Figure 11 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with different channel width.
Figure 12 is a flow chart of a method of spatial re-use with TPC and adaptive CCA in accordance with one novel aspect.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Reference will now be made in detail to some embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
Figure 1 illustrates a wireless network 100 having overlapping basic service set (OBSS) with spatial re-use in accordance with one novel aspect. Wireless network 100 comprises a plurality of wireless stations 111 (STA1) , 112 (STA2) , 113 (STA3) , and 114 (STA4) . Each station can be an access point station (AP-STA) , or a non-AP-STA. STA1 and STA2 belong to a first BSS1 having STA2 as an access point (AP) , and STA3 and STA4 belong to a second BSS2 having STA4 as an access point (AP) . BSS1 and BSS2 are overlapping BSS (OBSS) with overlapping coverages. In the example of Figure 1, STA1 and STA2 have gained the access to the wireless medium and have ongoing frame exchange between them. Meanwhile, STA3 is trying to initiate a frame exchange with STA4.
In IEEE 802.11 wireless networks, an enhanced distributed channel access protocol (EDCA) is used as a channel contention procedure for wireless devices to gain access to the shared wireless medium, e.g., to obtain a transmitting opportunity (TXOP) for transmitting radio signals onto the shared wireless medium. During the first stage of EDCA, the TXOP is obtained based solely on activity of the primary channel. The primary channel is BUSY of one of the predefined conditions is met based on Clear Channel Assessment (CCA) sensitivity levels . During the second stage of EDCA, the transmit channel width is selected based on the secondary channel CCA during an interval (PIFS) immediately preceding the start of TXOP. The secondary channel is BUSY if one of the predefined conditions is met based on CCA levels .
IEEE 802.11ac is a wireless networking standard in the 802.11 family providing high-throughput WLANs on the 5 GHz band. The High Efficiency WLAN study group (HEW SG) is a study group within IEEE 802.11 working group that will consider the improvement of spectrum efficiency to enhance the system throughput in high-density scenarios of wireless devices. Because of HEW SG, TGax (an IEEE task group) was formed and tasked to work on IEEE 802.11ax standard that will become a successor to IEEE 802.11ac.
In general, raising CCA levels has been shown to increase spatial re-use, which leads to significant increase in the network throughput in some dense deployment scenarios . In dense deployment scenario with multiple small BSS footprints in which APs and non-AP STAs are mostly exchanging frames at the highest MCS (modulation and coding) , the baseline (primary channel) CCA level -82dBm leads to excessive deferral and thus lower overall throughput. However, raising CCA level can introduce more collision in the networks. It also increases device power consumption due to retries and is unfair to legacy stations since they still use the baseline CCA level. It has been observed that similar network throughput increase can be achieved in some dense deployment scenarios by lowering the transmit power of all STAs, which also reduces power consumption. On the other hand, when there are both legacy stations and IEEE 802.11ax stations co-exist in one area, only reducing the transmit power of the IEEE 802.11ax STAs can lead to performance degradation of the IEEE 802. llax STAs .
In one novel aspect , a solution based on transmit power control (TPC) and adaptive CCA level is provided 1) to increase the spatial re-use without causing collision; 2) to maintain fairness between stations in different BSSs; 3) to maintain fairness between HEW stations and legacy stations; and 4) to maintain power efficiency . As illustrate in Figure 1 , if STA3 wants to establish a link with STA4 without interfering with STA1/STA2 with spatial re-use, it requires several
pre-conditions: 1) STA3 needs to identify whether the
STA1/STA2 link is an inter-BSS link or an intra-BSS link; 2) STA3 should not cause interference to STA1 and STA2 , e.g., radio signal 121 does not interfere STA1 and radio signal 122 does not interfere STA2 ; and 3) STA4 should not cause interference to STA1 and STA2 , e.g., radio signal 123 does not interfere STA1 and radio signal 124 does not interfere STA4. In the current baseline EDCA procedure, only STA3 (the initiating STA) performs CCA procedure . STA4 (the responding STA) does not perform CCA. Thus, the pre-condition 3) might not be satisfied . When STA4 transmission results in collision, it is called the hidden node problem. Skipping the
pre-condition 3) results in simpler procedure at the expense of higher chance of collision. Additionally, pre-condition 2) might only be partially satisfied, i.e., STA3 might cause interference to one of STA1 or STA2. In a preferred embodiment, TPC and adaptive CCA is applied by STA3 and/or STA4 to satisfy the preconditions for spatial re-use and thereby increasing network throughput. Figure 2 is a simplified block diagram of an initiating device 201 and a responding device 211 in a wireless network
200 in accordance with one novel aspect. Initiating device
201 comprises memory 202, a processor 203, a control and configuration module 204, a power controller 205, an EDCA module 206, a spatial re-use detection module 207, and a transceiver 208 coupled to antenna 209. Similarly, responding device 211 comprises memory 212, a processor 213, a control and configuration module 214, a power controller 215, an EDCA module 216, a spatial re-use detection module 217, and a transceiver 218 coupled to antenna 219. In the transmitting direction, the transceiver converts received baseband signals from the processor to RF signals and sends out to the antenna. Similarly, in the receiving direction, the processor processes the received baseband signals from the transceiver and invoke different functional modules to be configured to perform various features supported by the wireless devices.
The different modules are functional modules that can be implemented in software, firmware, hardware, or any combination thereof. The function modules, when executed by processors 203 and 213 (via program instructions 209 and 219 contained in memory 202 and 212) , interwork with each other to allow the wireless devices to perform channel access with spatial re-use. For example, the spatial re-use detection module observe the wireless medium to confirm that it is allowed to start a spatial re-use frame exchange 231, the EDCA module contends the wireless medium for spatial re-use with other STAs through a random backoff EDCA procedure, the control and configuration module performs various control and configuration functionalities, and the power control module determines and controls a transmit (TX) power level (or TX spectral power density) such that spatial re-use frame exchange 231 does not cause collision in the network. Figure 3 illustrates a method flow of a wireless device performing spatial re-use frame exchange in a wireless network. The wireless network comprises a plurality of stations STA1 , STA2 , STA3 , and STA4. In step 311, STA1 and STA2 have gained a TXOP to access the wireless medium and have ongoing frame exchange between them. STA3 is trying to initiate a frame exchange with STA4 by exploiting spatial re-use of the wireless medium. In step 331, STA3 performs spatial observation of the wireless medium and update its database for spatial re-use purpose. Note that spatial observation is an optional step and can occur during a long-term or a short-term moving observation window before the actual spatial re-use frame exchange. In step 332, STA3 performs spatial re-use detection and observes the on-going frame exchange in the wireless medium to confirm whether STA3 is allowed to start a spatial re-use frame exchange. In a preferred embodiment, STA3 applies TPC with adaptive CCA level in determining its TX power level . STA3 decides whether its TX power level is sufficient to close the link with STA4 based on its prior experience or observation. If there is not sufficient margin to close the link, STA3 abandons its attempt for spatial re-use based on current spatial detection. If STA3 has sufficient link margin, it then raises its CCA level based on the observed signal (power density) level from STA1 and STA2 such that it can perform EDCA backoff procedure. In step 333, STA3 performs an EDCA backoff procedure to contend the wireless medium with other spatial re-use STAs for spatial re-use frame exchange with STA4. Finally, in step 334, STA3 gains a spatial re-use TXOP and starts frame exchange with STA4. STA4 is engaging in spatial observation when it receives a spatial re-use packet from STA3. In a preferred embodiment, STA4 applies TPC in determining its TX power level when it transmits a response to STA3. Figure 4 illustrates a preferred embodiment of transmit power control (TPC) and adaptive CCA level for spatial re-use with HEW stations . In the embodiment of Figure 4, STAl and STA2 have ongoing frame exchange in BSS1, and STA3 applies TPC to ensure that any spatial re-use frame exchange in BSS2 will not causing interference to STAl and to STA2. In a first option, STAl and STA2 signal their transmit power level (TX-PWR_STA1 and TX-PWR_STA2) and their received signal strength indicator (RSSI) from the peer. Signaling TX-PWR allows a receiver (e.g., STA3) to determine the pathloss . For example, the pathloss between STAl and STA3 = TX-PWR_STA1 - RSSI (by STA3 from STAl) . Similarly, the pathloss between STA2 and STA3 = TX-PWR_STA2 - RSSI (by STA3 from STA2) . Once pathloss is determined, STA3 can then determine its own TX power level (TPC) based on the following equations, and STA3 should select the lower TX power level between TPC1 and TPC2 such that STA3 would not cause interference to both STAl and STA2. Pathloss (STA1-3) = TX-PWR_STA1 - RSSI (by STA3 from
STAl) ;
Pathloss (STA2-3) = TX-PWR_STA2 - RSSI (by STA3 from STA2) ;
and
TPC1 - pathloss (STA1-3) < RSSI (by STAl from STA2) -
Fixed Margin;
TPC2 - pathloss (STA2-3) < RSSI (by STA2 from STAl) - Fixed Margin.
In an embodiment, only one of the two in-equality (TPC1 or TPC2) needs to be satisfied if the STA3 only observes transmission of one of STAl or STA2.
Since STA3 power arrives at STA1/STA2 below its peer RSSI from STA2/STA1 minus fixed margin, it does not cause interference to STA1/STA2. The fixed margin, e.g., 20 dB, is required for signal to noise ratio (SNR) for operating certain MCS (Modulation and coding scheme) . If STA3 cannot close the link with STA4 , then STA3 should abandon its transmission. In some situations, STA3 does not receive either STA1 or STA2 signal. In this case, only one transmit power level (TPC1 or TPC2) obtained from the received signal is used.
In a spatial re-use environment, STA1 and STA2 might be operating at certain interference level from other links (which is above the noise level) . In a second option, a more precise estimation of the TX power level for STA3 can be obtained if STA1 and STA2 directly signal their received interference level , or their adjusted CCA level . As a result, STA3 can then determine its TX power level based on the following equations for STA1 and STA2 respectively and select the lower TX power level between TPC1 and TPC2 such that STA3 would not cause interference to both STA1 and STA2.
TPC1 - Pathloss (STA1 received interference level_STAl - error margin;
TPC2 - Pathloss (STA2 received interference level_STA2 - error margin;
or
TPC1 - Pathloss (STA1 adjusted CCA level_STAl error margin;
TPC2 - Pathloss (STA2 adjusted CCA level STA2 error margin.
In an embodiment, only one of the two in-equality (TPC1 or TPC2) needs to be satisfied if the STA3 only observes transmission of one of STA1 or STA2.
Since STA3 power arrives at STA1/STA2 below its received interference level or its adjusted CCA level, it does not cause interference to STA1/STA2. The error margin, e.g. , 5 dB, is applied to accommodate error. Note that the adjusted CCA level of STA3 is equal to the received interference (+noise) level at STA3. If STA3 cannot close the link with STA4 , then STA3 should abandon its transmission. In some situations, the STA3 does not receive either STA1 or STA2 signal . In this case, only one transmit power level (TPC1 or TPC2) obtained from the received signal is used.
In addition to transmit power level (TX-PWR) , RSSI from peer, received interference level, adjusted CCA level, additional information is required by STA3 from STA1 and STA2 for spatial re-use purpose. First, STA3 needs to identify whether the STA1/STA2 link is an inter-BSS link or an intra-BSS link. In order to do that, STA1 and STA2 should signal their BSS color, or TX IDs and RX IDs. A BSS color is a shortened indication (e.g., a 3-5 bits indication) of BSS ID, which is chosen by an AP based on its observation of BSS colors of overlapping neighbor BSSs. Second, STA3 needs to know the remaining TXOP duration of the ongoing STA1-STA2 frame exchange so that STA3 can gain a spatial re-use TXOP that is fair to other legacy STAs. Further details of the spatial re-use TXOP duration will be explained later with respect to Figure 8.
The spatial re-use STAs calculate space loss to STA1 and STA2 and adjust their transmit power to be below the received interference-margin of STA1 and STA2 to avoid collision. In an IEEE 802.11ax only environment, such proposed TPC and adaptive CCA can avoid the collision during spatial re-use. However, in a mixed environment with both IEEE 802.11ax STAs and legacy STAs, spatial re-use STAs do not have the information to adjust their transmit power level . This is because legacy STAs do not signal their transmit power and received interference , CCA, or RSSI from peer . Therefore, a different TPC should be used in a mixed environment with legacy STAs . Figure 5 illustrates another embodiment of transmit power control and adaptive CCA level based on RSSI for spatial re-use with legacy stations. In the example of Figure 5, legacy STA1 and STA2 have ongoing frame exchange, and HEW STA3 applies TPC to ensure that any spatial re-use frame exchange will not causing interference to STA1 and to STA2. Because STA1 and STA2 in Figure 5 are legacy STAs, they do not signal their TX-PWR, another TPC is proposed for STA3 that is based on the RSSI and signal bandwidth from STA1 and STA2. The basic assumptions here are 1) the received interference level is at the CCA of the legacy STA, and 2) the transmit power (i.e. , TX-PWR_Ref) is the same for all STAs, with a margin to accommodate the TX power level differences. Alternatively, it is also reasonable to assume that all non-AP STAs have the same transmit power level and all AP STAs have the same transmit power level where AP's transmit power level and non-AP STA' s transmit power level differ by a fixed value. As illustrated in Figure 5, the co-channel interference (CCI) at STA3 is estimated to be CCI = MAX (Received PWR_STA1, Received PWR_STA2) - CCA, and the adjusted TPC = TX-PWR_Ref - CCI - margin .
Here, a reference transmit power level TX-PWR_Ref and the baseline CCA level at CCA_baseline are defined. Suppose that STA3 , intending to access the medium, receives a signal from STA1 with a power level RX-PWRSTA1 exceeding CCA and/or receives a signal from STA2 with a power level RX-PWRSTA2 exceeding CCA. STA3 can raise its CCA level to max (RX-PWRSTA1 , RX-PWRSTA2) (an increase of Δ = max (RX-PWRSTA1 , RX-PWRSTA2) - CCA_baseline , and reduces its TX power level to TX-PWR_Ref - Δ - margin. STA3 is then allowed to access the medium in concurrent with STA1 ' s transmission. If the adjusted transmit power is not enough to close the link, then STA3 abandons the transmission. Note that the margin is used to accommodate differences in transmit power from TX-PWR_Ref in STA1 and STA2 , since STA1 and/or STA2 might not signal their transmit power. By reducing the transmit power below (TX-PWR_Ref - Δ - margin) , the STA3 reduces the chance of causing interference to the transmitting STA (STA1) and achieves the spatial re-use.
Figures 6 illustrates one embodiment of spatial re-use with excessive margin in a wireless network 600. In the example of Figure 6, STA1 and STA2 have ongoing frame exchange, and STA3 is trying to initiate spatial re-use frame exchange with other STAs. Suppose STA1 has excess margin M_rx in the received link. The excess margin is defined as the difference between the received SNR and the required SNR when highest MCS is being used. STA1 can allow other OBSS spatial re-use STAs (e.g., STA3) more room for spatial re-use by: 1) signaling M_rx to other spatial re-use STAs, which allows OBSS STAs to have higher spatial re-use TPC; 2) lowering its own TPC to reduce interference to OBSS STAs, and 3) signaling an artificially raised received interference level or adjusted CCA to a higher level corresponding to M_rx, which allows OBSS STAs to have higher spatial re-use TPC.
In the above embodiments for transmit power adjustment, the spatial re-use STA4 in response to STA3 signal, should adjust its transmit power based on information received or received RSSI in the frame exchange signals of STA1 and STA2 immediately prior to STA3 ' s transmission of spatial re-use signal .
Figure 7 illustrates a processing flow of spatial re-use in accordance with one novel aspect . In the embodiment of Figure 7, spatial re-use STA3 performs a four-step spatial re-use procedure to be able to have spatial re-use frame exchange while OBSS STA1 and STA2 have ongoing frame exchange. The four steps are spatial observation, spatial re-use detection, spatial contention, and spatial re-use frame exchange . In a first step of spatial observation, STA3 observes the medium and constantly updates its database prior to frame exchange. In one embodiment , STA maintains a long-term moving window for a medium activity database. For example, during Tl=5seconds, STA3 monitors medium activity, e.g., frame exchange between STAl and STA2 and updates its database. The database information obtained from information signaled by STAs, observed RSSIs , BSS color, etc. The spatial observation allows STA3 to form a decision of what transmit power level to use during spatial re-use, and to determine whether the recipient STA is nearby or not when a nearby STA sends a frame. Note the TPC based on the long-term spatial observation is overly conservative since most of neighbor STAs observed might not be active during the spatial re-use frame exchange.
In a second step of spatial re-use detection, STA3 wants to initiate a frame exchange and therefore detects ongoing frame exchange in the medium to confirm that it is allowed to start a spatial re-use frame exchange . Since a pair of STAs (STAl and STA2) are doing frame exchange, both STAl and STA2 need to be taken into considerations during the spatial re-use detection. In order for STA3 not to interfere with both STAl and STA2 , STA3 observes the medium and performs spatial re-use detection. Spatial re-use detection mandates STA3 to observe the medium for a duration (e.g., T2) during which both STAl and STA2 transmit PPDU. STA3 determines a first transmit power that would not cause interference to STAl, a second transmit power that would not cause interference to STA2 , and then selects the lower transmit power so that the spatial re-use frame exchange would not interfere both STAl and STA2. Note that STA3 might only receive signal from one of STAl or STA2 during spatial detection. During spatial detection, STA3 should also collects spatial re-use information such as BSS color, received interference level or received RSSI or adjusted CCA, remaining TXOP duration from STA1 and STA2. A spatial re-use STA4 should also observes the medium and the spatial re-use information collected immediately prior to receiving a signal from STA3 is used to determine its transmit power level .
In a third step of spatial contention, STA3 contends the medium for spatial re-use with other STAs . After spatial re-use detection is completed, STA3 decides whether to initiate a spatial re-use frame exchange based on if it can close the link . STA3 shall perform a backoff procedure (e.g., EDCA procedure) during time T3 to prevent collision with other spatial re-use stations. STA3 spatial re-use backoff procedure should be independent from non- spatial -reuse backoff procedures that are not invoked by the adaptive CCA. This is to ensure fairness to legacy STAs, because legacy STAs do not participate in the spatial re-use EDCA. In other words , the spatial re-use EDCA cannot be used to change the back off counter of the EDCA that employs fixed legacy CCA levels. It is important that all spatial re-use STA use the same procedure to determine when to start spatial re-use backoff procedure to ensure all spatial re-use STAs compete equally and avoids collision among the spatial re-use STAs. At the completion of the EDCA backoff procedure, STA3 starts a spatial re-use frame exchange by transmitting a frame to its intended recipient station (e.g., STA4) .
In a fourth step of spatial re-use frame exchange, STA3 gains spatial re-use TXOP and starts frame exchange with its peer station (e.g., STA4) during time T4. If STA4 is a legacy STA, STA3 shall start with a request to send (RTS) transmission to avoid STA4 interfering with STA1/STA2 or any other OBSS STAs in proximity to STA4. Legacy STA will not respond with clear to send (CTS) if its NAV is not zero. On the other hand, if STA4 is not a legacy STA, spatial re-use STA3 is not required to start with RTS . STA3 can send any type of frame, which does not observe NAV=0 rule. Spatial re-use STA4 adopts the CCA and TX power level adjustment rules for spatial re-use when it responds to STA3. STA4 should determine whether it could respond and adjust its TX power level based on the spatial re-use information it receives during spatial observation of ongoing medium activities prior to STA3 ' s transmission, the prior or observed link margin with STA3. STA4 determines its TX power level the same way as STA3 based on its received or observed spatial re-use information.
Figure 8 illustrates spatial re-use and corresponding frame exchange with a fair TXOP duration and EDCA rules in a mixed wireless network with both legacy stations and spatial re-use stations. In the example of Figure 8, API, STA1 and STA2 belong to a first BSS1, while spatial re-use STA3 belongs to a second BSS2. STA1 and API engages in an ongoing frame exchange. Spatial re-use STA3 initiates a spatial re-use frame exchange with other stations in BSS2 (e.g. , another STA, STA4 , not shown) . Suppose STA2 is a legacy station, and its NAV setting is non-zero from time tO to tl due to the ongoing frame exchange between STA1 and API. However, when spatial re-use STA3 establishes spatial re-use duration from t3 to t2, STA2 has to reset its NAV from tl to t2. This results in an unfair advantage of spatial re-use STA3 over legacy STA2 since it causes STA2 to be deferred further.
In order to resolve the unfair situation to legacy STA2 , the spatial re-use frame exchange duration (TXOP) should be limited to the original NAV setting between STA1 and API . The spatial re-use transmission shall end before time tl so that it will not cause STA2 NAV to be extended to time t2. As a result, STA2 can resume medium contention from time tl . In one embodiment, STA1 and API can signal the remaining TXOP duration. For example, they signal the remaining duration from a reference time epoch in the packet such as at the end of the preamble or end of the packet transmission. When STA3 performs spatial contention so that STA3 contends the medium and gains a fair spatial re-use duration with TXOP that ends at time tl .
Because spatial re-use medium access involves only spatial re-use stations but not legacy stations, a separate and independent EDCA contention would be required for stations participate in spatial re-use medium access. As illustrated in Figure 8, the original EDCA is suspended upon receiving RTS or CTS, and resumes after tl . The following description provides an example of a fair spatial re-use EDCA backoff procedure.
When a protection NAV for a TXOP is set up for an on-going frame exchange and spatial detection is performed by an OBSS non-AP spatial re-use STA or OBSS spatial re-use AP, the OBSS non-AP spatial re-use STA or OBSS spatial re-use AP may initiate a spatial re-use exchange after a spatial re-use Backoff. For a non-AP spatial re-use STA, the spatial re-use Backoff is initialized with pre-defined EDCA parameters or from the most recently received spatial re-use EDCA parameter set element sent by the AP with which the STA is associated. For a spatial re-use STA, the spatial re-use Backoff is initialized with the spatial re-use EDCA parameters The spatial re-use Backoff function begins or resumes when the spatial detection is performed. The spatial re-use Backoff function is independent of all other legacy backoff functions but follows the similar EDCAF backoff procedure. An OBSS non-AP spatial re-use STA or OBSS spatial re-use AP that invokes or resumes a spatial re-use Backoff at the confirmation of a spatial re-use condition shall set a spatial re-use timer to NAV or based on spatial re-use information such as received remaining TXOP duration and reset its NAV and suspend EDCAF backoff procedures. At the expiry of the spatial re-use timer, the spatial re-use Backoff is suspended and the suspended EDCAF backoff procedures resume. An OBSS non-AP spatial re-use STA or OBSS spatial re-use AP that initiates a new spatially re-use frame exchange after a spatial re-use Backoff procedure shall start the exchange with RTS/CTS when transmitting to a legacy STA or start with regular frame when transmitting to another spatial re-use STA and shall limit the duration of the exchange such that it ends before the expiry of the spatial re-use timer. The STA shall obey the TXOP limit of the AC of the frames transmitted within the spatial re-use frame exchange or the remaining TXOP duration received during spatial detection. An STA that transmits a spatial re-use frame exchange may transmit additional spatial re-use frame exchanges by continuing to use the spatial re-use Backoff function until the expiry of the spatial re-use timer. If the ongoing frame exchange transmission is between a pair of STAs within its BSS (with matching BSS color) , the STA does not reset its NAV even though the Spatially Re-use conditions are met.
Figure 9 illustrates an example of OFDMA operation. One mode of Uplink (UL) OFDMA operation starts with API transmitting a trigger frame and multiple STAs (STA1-STA3) transmit UL OFDMA signals which occupy a fraction of the channel bandwidth. Because STAs, in response to AP signal, might not perform CCA before their uplink transmission and STAs have high transmit power density (narrow band signal) , it is expected that STAs' signals may propagate farther than APs signal . Additionally, STAs' transmission duration can be shorter than TXOP. Therefore, it is more difficult to perform spatial observation or spatial re-use detection for UL OFDMA. In one preferred embodiment, an OBSS spatial re-use STA can use the aggregate received power and aggregate received interference from these OFDMA STAs to adapt its CCA level and determine its transmit power adjustment. In another embodiment, an OBSS spatial re-use STA can use the
max-received power from all the OFDMA STAs to adapt its CCA and adjust its TX power to be below minimum received interference of all OFDMA STAs . In another option, no spatial re-use is applied if UL OFDMA is used. In another option, AP-to-AP coordination is required for UL OFDMA to mitigate OBSS interference based on some pre-determined procedure.
Figure 10 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with beamformed transmission. For an STA with spatial reciprocity, it can employ beamforming during spatial re-use detection. Spatial reciprocity is a device capability of transmitting and receiving with the same antenna pattern that could be synthesized with multiple antennas. In the example of Figure 10 , STA1 and STA2 engages in an ongoing frame exchange in BSS1. Spatial re-use STA3 can perform spatial detection under beamformed condition. Note that proper beamforming antenna setting 1013 can be used to suppress the received power fromSTAl and/orSTA2 or to enhance link margin with STA4 during spatial detection and spatial re-use frame exchange. After STA3 performs the spatial detection, spatial re-use STA3 initiates a spatial re-use frame exchange with STA4 in BSS2. STA3 performs a spatial detection with radio signals 1011 and 1012 from STA1 and STA2 via spatially reciprocal beamforming. If STA3 cannot hear from STA1 and STA2 using a beamformed antenna pattern 1013 for receiving, then the radio signals transmitted from the spatially reciprocal device STA3 do not interfere STA1 and STA2 if STA3 applies with the same beamformed antenna pattern 1013. Note that the same adaptive CCA and transmit power adjustment procedure can be applied to the spatially reciprocal beamforming STAs for spatial re-use. Proper beamforming in conjunction with the proposed TPC and adaptive CCA can enhance the spatial re-use by suppressing STA1 and/or STA2 signal level and/or enhancing link robustness and quality between STA3 and STA4.
Figure 11 illustrates an example of spatial re-use with different channel widths. The signal propagation range is determined by the spectral density (power/Hz) instead of the signal power level. Currently, the baseline (primary channel) CCA levels are based on equal spectral density for all RX channel widths. For example, the CCA level/channel width (in unit of 20MHz) is equal to -82dBm, -79 dBm, -76 dBm, -73 dBm for any 20MHz, 40MHz, 80MHz, and 160MHz RX channels, respectively. However, the TX spectral density is not the same for all TX channel widths. The TX spectral density of a narrower TX channel is typically higher than the TX spectral density of a wider TX channel, e.g., TX_PWR/20M > TX_PWR/40M > TX_PWR/80M > TX_PWR/160M. As a result, a narrower TX channel width transmission interferes or defers a wider channel width transmission. The likelihood of the wider channel transmission is therefore reduced based on the current EDCA procedure .
To accommodate the different channel widths, the parameter TX-PWR used in the spatial re-use protocol should be adjusted for different TX channel width. TX-PWR should be scaled to provide equal TX spectral density. As illustrated in Figure 11, TX-PWR_160M = TX-PWR_80M+3dB = TX-PWR_40M+6dB = TX-PWR_20M+9dB . This means that wider TX channel width is allowed to transmit at higher power than narrower TX channel width. Note that these transmit power level is determined based on the received power density level (received RSSI scaled by signal bandwidth from legacy STAs) or the received interference power density level or adjusted CCA level scaled by the signal bandwidth received from spatial re-use STA. Additionally, the signaled TX power level should be adjusted by bandwidth. This resolves the issue of narrower width transmission interfering or deferring a wider width transmission. The likelihood of the wider channel
transmission is increased.
Accordingly, it is desirable to modify the EDCA channel access rules to achieve equal TX spectral density for all channel widths. In one example, an STA follow the following modified EDCA channel access: a) Transmit a 160MHz or 80+80MHZ mask PPDU at the power level P if the secondary channel, the secondary 40MHz channel and the secondary 80MHz channel were idle during an interval of PIFS immediately preceding the start of the TXOP; b) Transmit an 80MHz mask PPDU at the power level P-3dB on the primary 80MHz channel if the secondary channel and the secondary 40MHz channel were idle during an interval of PIFS immediately preceding the start of the TXOP; c) Transmit a 40MHz mask PPDU at a power level P-6dB on the primary 40MHz channel if the secondary channel was idle during an interval of PIFS immediately preceding the start of the TXOP; d) Transmit a 20MHz mask PPDU at a power level P-9dB on the primary 20MHz channel; and e) Restart the channel access attempt by invoking the backoff procedure as though the medium is busy on the primary channel as indicated by either physical or virtual CS and the backoff timer has value of 0.
Figure 12 is a flow chart of a method of spatial re-use with TPC and adaptive CCA in accordance with one novel aspect . In step 1201, a spatial re-use station detects spatial re-use information associated with other peer stations belong to an inter-BSS or overlapping BSS . The inter-BSS peer stations engage an ongoing frame exchange. The spatial re-use information comprises a TX spectral density (power/Hz) and received signal or interference information of each inter-BSS peer station. In step 1202, the spatial re-use STA determines a TX spectral density based on the detected spatial re-use information. In step 1203, the spatial re-use STA contends the medium for spatial re-use transmission opportunity (TXOP) with an intra-BSS peer station. In step 1204, the spatial re-use STA starts a spatial re-use frame exchange with the intra-BSS peer station using the determined TX spectral density such that the spatial re-use frame exchange does not interfere with the ongoing frame exchange. By adjusting the TX spectral density, the spatial re-use STA adapts its CCA level to spatially reuse the medium without causing collision and interference to OBSS stations and thus increases network throughput .
Although the present invention has been described in connection with certain specific embodiments for
instructional purposes, the present invention is not limited thereto. Accordingly, various modifications, adaptations, and combinations of various features of the described embodiments can be practiced without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth in the claims.

Claims

CLAIMS What is claimed is:
1. A method performed by an initiating wireless station, the method comprising:
detecting spatial re-use information associated with one or more detected overlapping basic service set (OBSS) stations engaging an ongoing frame exchange;
determining a transmit power or power density level and an adjusted clear channel assessment (CCA) level based on the detected spatial re-use information; and
attempting to initiate a spatial re-use frame exchange with a responding wireless station in concurrent with the ongoing frame exchange of the detected OBSS stations.
2. The method of Claim 1, wherein the adjusted CCA level is raised to be equal to or above a detected power from each of the one or more detected OBSS stations.
3. The method of Claim 1, wherein the detected spatial re-use information comprises a transmit power or power density level signaled by each of the one or more detected OBSS stations for determining a corresponding space loss.
4. The method of Claim 1, wherein the detected spatial re-use information comprises a received interference power or power spectral density level signaled by the one or more detected OBSS stations.
5. The method of Claim 4, wherein the determined TX power or power density level results a spatial re-use signal arriving at the one or more OBSS stations is below the signaled interference power or power spectral density level of the OBSS stations by a predefined margin.
6. The method of Claim 1, wherein the detected spatial re-use information comprises an adjusted clear channel assessment (CCA) level signaled by the one or more detected OBSS stations .
7. The method of Claim 6, wherein the determined TX power or power density level results a spatial re-use signal arriving at the one or more OBSS stations is below the signaled adjusted CCA level of the OBSS stations by a predefined margin.
8. The method of Claim 1, wherein the detected spatial re-use information comprises a peer received signal strength indicator (RSSI) signaled by the one or more detected OBSS stations .
9. The method of Claim 8, wherein the determined TX power or power density level results a spatial re-use signal arriving at the one or more OBSS stations is below the signaled peer received RSSI of the OBSS stations by a predefined margin.
10. The method of Claim 1 , wherein the detected spatial re-use information comprises a signal bandwidth signaled by the one or more detected OBSS stations, and wherein the detected spatial re-use information is scaled by the signal bandwidth.
11. The method of Claim 1, further comprising:
signaling spatial re-use information of the initiating wireless station, the information comprising at least one of a transmit power level, a transmit power density level, a signal bandwidth, a BSS color, a TX/RX ID, a received peer RSSI, a received interference power level, a received interference power spectral density level, an adjusted CCA level, and an excess margin.
12. The method of Claim 11, wherein the spatial re-use information is signaled in an SIG-A field or an SIG-B field of each frame transmitted by the wireless station.
13. The method of Claim 1, wherein the OBSS stations are IEEE TGax stations, and wherein the spatial re-use information is detected via receiving signaling from the IEEE TGax stations.
14. The method of Claim 1 , wherein the detected spatial re-use information comprises an excess margin signaled by the one or more detected OBSS stations, and wherein the excess margin is defined as a difference between a link signal to noise ratio (SNR) and a required SNR for the highest modulation and coding scheme (MCS) .
15. The method of Claim 14, wherein the excess margin is implicitly signaled through a received interference power level or power spectral density level further adjusted by the excess margin.
16. The method of Claim 14, wherein the excess margin is implicitly signaled through an adjusted CCA level further adjusted by the excess margin.
17. The method of Claim 1, wherein the OBSS stations are legacy stations, and wherein the spatial re-use information is detected based on the received signal power or power spectral density level, a reference transmit power level and an estimated co-channel interference of the legacy stations.
18. The method of Claim 17, wherein the determined TX power or power density level results a spatial re-use signal arriving at the OBSS legacy stations is below the legacy CCA level by a predefined margin.
19. The method of Claim 1, wherein the OBSS stations applies OFDMA for uplink transmission, and wherein the determined TX power level or power density level is based on an aggregated received interference power level or power spectral density level of the OBSS stations.
20. The method of Claim 1, wherein the OBSS stations applies OFDMA for uplink transmission, and wherein the determined TX power level or power density level is based on a maximum received power level or power density level from the OBSS stations .
21. The method of Claim 1, wherein the initiating wireless station has spatial reciprocity, and wherein the station applies beamforming during the detecting of the spatial re-use information .
22. A method performed by a responding wireless station, the method comprising:
detecting spatial re-use information associated with one or more detected overlapping basic service set (OBSS) stations engaging an ongoing frame exchange;
determining a transmit power or power density level based on the detected spatial re-use information; and
engaging in a spatial re-use frame exchange with an initiating wireless station in concurrent with the ongoing frame exchange of the detected OBSS stations.
23. The method of Claim 22, wherein the detected spatial re-use information comprising at least one of a transmit power level, a transmit power density level, a signal bandwidth, a BSS color, a TX/RX ID, a received peer RSSI, a received interference power level, a received interference power spectral density level, an adjusted clear channel assessment (CCA) level, and an excess margin.
24. The method of Claim 23, wherein the determined TX power or power density level results a spatial re-use signal arriving at the one or more OBSS stations is below the detected interference power or power spectral density level, the detected adjusted CCA level, or the detected peer received RSSI by a predefined margin.
25. A method performed by an initiating wireless station, comprising :
(a) detecting spatial re-use information associated with overlapping basic service set (OBSS) stations, wherein the spatial re-use information comprises a transmit power level and received signal or interference information of each OBSS station;
(b) determining a transmit power level or power density level and an adjusted clear channel assessment (CCA) level based on the detected spatial re-use information;
(c) contending for a spatial re-use transmission opportunity (TXOP) with a spatial re-use responding station; and
(d) starting spatial re-use frame exchange with the spatial re-use responding station using the transmit power level or power density level determined in (b) .
26. The method of Claim 25, further comprising:
observing a wireless medium for spatial re-use during a moving window before the detecting in (a) , wherein the station updates a database storing the spatial re-use information.
27. The method of Claim 25, wherein the spatial re-use information further comprises a BSS color that indicates a BSS ID of the OBSS.
28. The method of Claim 25, wherein the spatial re-use information further comprises a remaining TXOP duration, and wherein the spatial re-use TXOP is set to be less than or equal to the remaining TXOP.
29. The method of Claim 25, wherein the contending in (c) involves an independent backoff procedure for the spatial re-use TXOP.
30. The method of Claim 25, wherein the spatial re-use responding station is a legacy station, and wherein the spatial re-use frame exchange in (d) starts with sending a request to send (RTS) frame to the spatial re-use responding station .
31. The method of Claim 25, wherein the detected spatial re-use information is scaled by a channel bandwidth.
PCT/US2015/012556 2014-01-24 2015-01-23 Adaptive cca and tx power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks WO2015112780A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US15/019,849 US9820162B2 (en) 2014-01-24 2016-02-09 Adaptive CCA and TX power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201461931080P 2014-01-24 2014-01-24
US61/931,080 2014-01-24
US201461932324P 2014-01-28 2014-01-28
US61/932,324 2014-01-28
US201461937719P 2014-02-10 2014-02-10
US61/937,719 2014-02-10

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US15/019,849 Continuation-In-Part US9820162B2 (en) 2014-01-24 2016-02-09 Adaptive CCA and TX power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2015112780A1 true WO2015112780A1 (en) 2015-07-30

Family

ID=53681953

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2015/012556 WO2015112780A1 (en) 2014-01-24 2015-01-23 Adaptive cca and tx power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks

Country Status (1)

Country Link
WO (1) WO2015112780A1 (en)

Cited By (36)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2017026833A1 (en) * 2015-08-12 2017-02-16 엘지전자 주식회사 Nav operation method in wireless lan system and station apparatus for same
WO2017026824A1 (en) * 2015-08-12 2017-02-16 엘지전자 주식회사 Nav operation method in wireless lan system and station apparatus for same
EP3133891A1 (en) * 2015-08-21 2017-02-22 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for determining carrier sense threshold in wireless communication system
EP3139671A1 (en) * 2015-09-07 2017-03-08 MediaTek Inc. Spatial reuse parameters for opportunistic adaptive tpc and cca
CN106535353A (en) * 2015-09-10 2017-03-22 华为技术有限公司 Random backoff method and device
WO2017057990A1 (en) * 2015-10-02 2017-04-06 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for supporting multi-bss in wireless lan system and device therefor
WO2017074070A1 (en) * 2015-10-27 2017-05-04 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for transmitting uplink frames of multiple users in a wireless lan system
CN106937403A (en) * 2015-12-31 2017-07-07 华为技术有限公司 A kind of back-off method and equipment based on space reuse
CN106961733A (en) * 2016-01-11 2017-07-18 华为技术有限公司 The method and apparatus for transmitting data
WO2017131885A1 (en) * 2016-01-29 2017-08-03 Intel IP Corporation Setting parameters for joint overlapping basic service set packet detect level and transmit power
EP3206444A1 (en) * 2016-02-09 2017-08-16 MediaTek Singapore Pte Ltd. Adaptive cca and tx power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks
WO2017150954A1 (en) * 2016-03-04 2017-09-08 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in basic service set overlapping with another basic service set
WO2017171531A1 (en) * 2016-04-02 2017-10-05 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
WO2017188713A1 (en) * 2016-04-26 2017-11-02 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for reducing bss color-based power consumption in wireless lan system, and device therefor
WO2017192693A1 (en) * 2016-05-06 2017-11-09 Qualcomm Incorporated Default spatial reuse modes
US9820162B2 (en) 2014-01-24 2017-11-14 Mediatek Singapore Pte Ltd. Adaptive CCA and TX power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks
EP3197197A4 (en) * 2014-10-23 2017-12-06 ZTE Corporation Data transmission method and station
WO2018057363A1 (en) * 2016-09-22 2018-03-29 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for adaptive threshold selection in obss packet power save
CN108029124A (en) * 2015-09-15 2018-05-11 高通股份有限公司 System and method for the reuse to the wireless communication resources in neighboring communication networks
KR20180063126A (en) * 2015-10-20 2018-06-11 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 A wireless communication method and a wireless communication terminal in a high density environment including a superimposed basic service set
KR20180069871A (en) * 2015-10-20 2018-06-25 후아웨이 테크놀러지 컴퍼니 리미티드 Method and device for transmitting data
KR20180082513A (en) * 2015-12-09 2018-07-18 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 A wireless communication method and a wireless communication terminal using a set of multi-basic service identifiers
CN108353365A (en) * 2015-11-06 2018-07-31 高通股份有限公司 Avoidance mechanism for dynamic clear channel assessment (CCA)
WO2017188712A3 (en) * 2016-04-26 2018-08-02 엘지전자 주식회사 Nav setting method considering bss color inactivation in wireless lan system and apparatus therefor
EP3376813A4 (en) * 2015-12-07 2018-11-14 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method and device for parallel transmission of data
CN109076604A (en) * 2016-05-13 2018-12-21 松下电器(美国)知识产权公司 Air station and communication means
KR20190008559A (en) * 2016-06-14 2019-01-24 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 A wireless communication method and a wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse operation
CN109314996A (en) * 2016-06-10 2019-02-05 高通股份有限公司 Method and apparatus for being reused on OBSS TXOP
US10365104B2 (en) 2016-05-11 2019-07-30 Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Digital controller for a MEMS gyroscope
US10631335B2 (en) 2016-04-02 2020-04-21 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal using basic service set identification information determination of received frame
US10764924B2 (en) 2015-11-03 2020-09-01 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high density environment including overlapped basic service sets
US10986517B2 (en) 2015-04-29 2021-04-20 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Sub-channelization in a wireless local area network (WLAN)
US11112248B2 (en) 2016-05-11 2021-09-07 Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Secondary sense loop with force feedback capability
TWI749793B (en) * 2020-09-30 2021-12-11 瑞昱半導體股份有限公司 Device and method of handling a transmission based on spatial reuse
CN114363877A (en) * 2020-10-14 2022-04-15 瑞昱半导体股份有限公司 Apparatus and method for processing spatial reuse based transmission
CN114513841A (en) * 2022-04-18 2022-05-17 国网四川省电力公司电力科学研究院 Multi-AP cooperation power control method and system for power emergency communication system

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20030033394A1 (en) * 2001-03-21 2003-02-13 Stine John A. Access and routing protocol for ad hoc network using synchronous collision resolution and node state dissemination
US20080137627A1 (en) * 2006-12-09 2008-06-12 Matthew Fischer Method and system for coexistence between 20 mhz and 40 mhz overlapping basic service sets (obss) in wireless local area networks

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20030033394A1 (en) * 2001-03-21 2003-02-13 Stine John A. Access and routing protocol for ad hoc network using synchronous collision resolution and node state dissemination
US20080137627A1 (en) * 2006-12-09 2008-06-12 Matthew Fischer Method and system for coexistence between 20 mhz and 40 mhz overlapping basic service sets (obss) in wireless local area networks

Cited By (116)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9820162B2 (en) 2014-01-24 2017-11-14 Mediatek Singapore Pte Ltd. Adaptive CCA and TX power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks
EP3197197A4 (en) * 2014-10-23 2017-12-06 ZTE Corporation Data transmission method and station
US10986517B2 (en) 2015-04-29 2021-04-20 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Sub-channelization in a wireless local area network (WLAN)
US11910210B2 (en) 2015-04-29 2024-02-20 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Methods and devices for sub-channelized transmission schemes in WLANS
US10595341B2 (en) 2015-08-12 2020-03-17 Lg Electronics Inc. NAV operation method in wireless LAN system and station apparatus for same
WO2017026833A1 (en) * 2015-08-12 2017-02-16 엘지전자 주식회사 Nav operation method in wireless lan system and station apparatus for same
WO2017026824A1 (en) * 2015-08-12 2017-02-16 엘지전자 주식회사 Nav operation method in wireless lan system and station apparatus for same
US10609730B2 (en) 2015-08-12 2020-03-31 Lg Electronics Inc. NAV operation method in wireless Lan system and station apparatus for same
KR20170022777A (en) * 2015-08-21 2017-03-02 삼성전자주식회사 Method and apparatus for determining carrier sense threshold in wireless communication system
EP3133891A1 (en) * 2015-08-21 2017-02-22 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for determining carrier sense threshold in wireless communication system
KR102347428B1 (en) * 2015-08-21 2022-01-05 삼성전자주식회사 Method and apparatus for determining carrier sense threshold in wireless communication system
US10602544B2 (en) 2015-08-21 2020-03-24 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for determining carrier sense threshold in wireless communication system
EP3139671A1 (en) * 2015-09-07 2017-03-08 MediaTek Inc. Spatial reuse parameters for opportunistic adaptive tpc and cca
US9749967B2 (en) 2015-09-07 2017-08-29 Mediatek Inc. Spatial reuse parameters for opportunistic adaptive TPC and CCA
CN106535353A (en) * 2015-09-10 2017-03-22 华为技术有限公司 Random backoff method and device
CN106535353B (en) * 2015-09-10 2020-02-14 华为技术有限公司 Random back-off method and device
KR102515534B1 (en) * 2015-09-15 2023-03-28 퀄컴 인코포레이티드 Systems and methods for reuse of wireless communication resources in neighboring communication networks
JP2018527840A (en) * 2015-09-15 2018-09-20 クゥアルコム・インコーポレイテッドQualcomm Incorporated System and method for reuse of wireless communication resources in neighboring communication networks
CN108029124A (en) * 2015-09-15 2018-05-11 高通股份有限公司 System and method for the reuse to the wireless communication resources in neighboring communication networks
CN108029124B (en) * 2015-09-15 2022-03-29 高通股份有限公司 System and method for reuse of wireless communication resources in adjacent communication networks
KR20180054698A (en) * 2015-09-15 2018-05-24 퀄컴 인코포레이티드 Systems and methods for reuse of wireless communication resources in neighboring communication networks
US10485028B2 (en) 2015-10-02 2019-11-19 Lg Electronics Inc. Method for supporting multi-BSS in wireless LAN system and device therefor
WO2017057990A1 (en) * 2015-10-02 2017-04-06 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for supporting multi-bss in wireless lan system and device therefor
KR20180069871A (en) * 2015-10-20 2018-06-25 후아웨이 테크놀러지 컴퍼니 리미티드 Method and device for transmitting data
EP3367743A4 (en) * 2015-10-20 2019-05-22 Wilus Institute of Standards and Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high-density environment including overlapped basic service set
AU2016343378B2 (en) * 2015-10-20 2020-02-20 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Data transmission method and apparatus
EP4152878A1 (en) * 2015-10-20 2023-03-22 Wilus Institute of Standards and Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high-density environment including overlapped basic service set
KR20180063126A (en) * 2015-10-20 2018-06-11 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 A wireless communication method and a wireless communication terminal in a high density environment including a superimposed basic service set
EP4096138A1 (en) * 2015-10-20 2022-11-30 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Data transmission method and apparatus
KR102103308B1 (en) 2015-10-20 2020-04-22 후아웨이 테크놀러지 컴퍼니 리미티드 Method and device for transmitting data
US10785795B2 (en) 2015-10-20 2020-09-22 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high-density environment including overlapped basic service set
EP3358776A4 (en) * 2015-10-20 2018-10-03 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method and device for transmitting data
US11375538B2 (en) 2015-10-20 2022-06-28 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high-density environment including overlapped basic service set
US11122578B2 (en) 2015-10-20 2021-09-14 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Data transmission method and apparatus
EP3866550A1 (en) * 2015-10-20 2021-08-18 Wilus Institute of Standards and Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high-density environment including overlapped basic service set
US11375537B2 (en) 2015-10-20 2022-06-28 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high-density environment including overlapped basic service set
KR102173322B1 (en) 2015-10-20 2020-11-04 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in a high-density environment including overlapping basic service sets
US10624106B2 (en) 2015-10-27 2020-04-14 Lg Electronics Inc. Method for transmitting uplink frames of multiple users in a wireless LAN system
WO2017074070A1 (en) * 2015-10-27 2017-05-04 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for transmitting uplink frames of multiple users in a wireless lan system
KR20180053409A (en) * 2015-10-27 2018-05-21 엘지전자 주식회사 A method for transmitting uplink frames of multiple users in a wireless LAN system
KR102059113B1 (en) 2015-10-27 2019-12-24 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for transmitting uplink frame of multiple users in wireless LAN system
US11330628B2 (en) 2015-11-03 2022-05-10 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. High density environment including overlapped basic service set
US10764924B2 (en) 2015-11-03 2020-09-01 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high density environment including overlapped basic service sets
US11330629B2 (en) 2015-11-03 2022-05-10 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. High density environment including overlapped basic service set
CN113950138A (en) * 2015-11-03 2022-01-18 韦勒斯标准与技术协会公司 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal
CN113950139A (en) * 2015-11-03 2022-01-18 韦勒斯标准与技术协会公司 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal
CN113950137A (en) * 2015-11-03 2022-01-18 韦勒斯标准与技术协会公司 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal
US11743943B2 (en) 2015-11-03 2023-08-29 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in high density environment including overlapped basic service sets
US10091817B2 (en) 2015-11-06 2018-10-02 Qualcomm Incorporated Backoff mechanism for dynamic clear channel assessment (CCA)
JP7045988B2 (en) 2015-11-06 2022-04-01 クアルコム,インコーポレイテッド Backoff mechanism for dynamic clear channel assessment (CCA)
CN108353365A (en) * 2015-11-06 2018-07-31 高通股份有限公司 Avoidance mechanism for dynamic clear channel assessment (CCA)
JP2018532343A (en) * 2015-11-06 2018-11-01 クアルコム,インコーポレイテッド Backoff mechanism for dynamic clear channel assessment (CCA)
EP3376813A4 (en) * 2015-12-07 2018-11-14 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method and device for parallel transmission of data
US10645724B2 (en) 2015-12-07 2020-05-05 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd Parallel data transmission method and apparatus
US11122495B2 (en) 2015-12-09 2021-09-14 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal using multi-basic service identifier set
US11696214B2 (en) 2015-12-09 2023-07-04 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal using multi-basic service identifier set
KR20180082513A (en) * 2015-12-09 2018-07-18 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 A wireless communication method and a wireless communication terminal using a set of multi-basic service identifiers
US11122496B2 (en) 2015-12-09 2021-09-14 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal using multi-basic service identifier set
KR102163572B1 (en) 2015-12-09 2020-10-07 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal using multiple basic service identifier sets
CN106937403B (en) * 2015-12-31 2020-01-31 华为技术有限公司 backoff method and device based on spatial reuse
CN106937403A (en) * 2015-12-31 2017-07-07 华为技术有限公司 A kind of back-off method and equipment based on space reuse
US10743185B2 (en) 2016-01-11 2020-08-11 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Data transmission method and apparatus
EP3393189A4 (en) * 2016-01-11 2018-12-12 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Data transmission method and device
CN106961733A (en) * 2016-01-11 2017-07-18 华为技术有限公司 The method and apparatus for transmitting data
CN106961733B (en) * 2016-01-11 2020-11-10 华为技术有限公司 Method and device for transmitting data
WO2017131885A1 (en) * 2016-01-29 2017-08-03 Intel IP Corporation Setting parameters for joint overlapping basic service set packet detect level and transmit power
EP3206444A1 (en) * 2016-02-09 2017-08-16 MediaTek Singapore Pte Ltd. Adaptive cca and tx power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks
KR20180113207A (en) * 2016-03-04 2018-10-15 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 A method of wireless communication in a different basic service set and a basic service set superimposed on the wireless communication terminal
KR102342150B1 (en) * 2016-03-04 2021-12-23 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in the basic service set overlapped with other basic service sets
US20210235448A1 (en) 2016-03-04 2021-07-29 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in basic service set overlapping with another basic service set
KR20210156874A (en) * 2016-03-04 2021-12-27 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in basic service set overlapping with another basic service set
KR102425184B1 (en) * 2016-03-04 2022-07-27 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in basic service set overlapping with another basic service set
WO2017150954A1 (en) * 2016-03-04 2017-09-08 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in basic service set overlapping with another basic service set
US11129163B2 (en) 2016-03-04 2021-09-21 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in basic service set overlapping with another basic service set
US11700597B2 (en) 2016-03-04 2023-07-11 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal in basic service set overlapping with another basic service set
KR20210042181A (en) * 2016-04-02 2021-04-16 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
US11140556B2 (en) 2016-04-02 2021-10-05 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
US11153759B2 (en) 2016-04-02 2021-10-19 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
CN109076614B (en) * 2016-04-02 2022-08-16 韦勒斯标准与技术协会公司 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapping basic service sets
WO2017171531A1 (en) * 2016-04-02 2017-10-05 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
US11272537B2 (en) 2016-04-02 2022-03-08 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal using basic service set identification information determination of received frame
KR102435189B1 (en) 2016-04-02 2022-08-23 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
US11324039B2 (en) 2016-04-02 2022-05-03 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal using basic service set identification information determination of received frame
CN109076614A (en) * 2016-04-02 2018-12-21 韦勒斯标准与技术协会公司 The wireless communications method and wireless communication terminal of the space reuse of the basic service set of overlapping
US20220007196A1 (en) 2016-04-02 2022-01-06 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
US10631335B2 (en) 2016-04-02 2020-04-21 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal using basic service set identification information determination of received frame
US10623964B2 (en) 2016-04-02 2020-04-14 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
US11871241B2 (en) 2016-04-02 2024-01-09 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse of overlapped basic service set
US10841961B2 (en) 2016-04-26 2020-11-17 Lg Electronics Inc. NAV setting method considering BSS color inactivation in wireless LAN system and apparatus therefor
KR20180100064A (en) * 2016-04-26 2018-09-06 엘지전자 주식회사 NAV setting method considering BSS COLOR deactivation in wireless LAN system and apparatus therefor
EP3451744A4 (en) * 2016-04-26 2019-12-04 LG Electronics Inc. -1- Nav setting method considering bss color inactivation in wireless lan system and apparatus therefor
US10433345B2 (en) 2016-04-26 2019-10-01 Lg Electronics Inc. NAV setting method considering BSS color inactivation in wireless LAN system and apparatus therefor
WO2017188712A3 (en) * 2016-04-26 2018-08-02 엘지전자 주식회사 Nav setting method considering bss color inactivation in wireless lan system and apparatus therefor
WO2017188713A1 (en) * 2016-04-26 2017-11-02 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for reducing bss color-based power consumption in wireless lan system, and device therefor
US10897737B2 (en) 2016-04-26 2021-01-19 Lg Electronics Inc. Method for reducing erroneous network allocation vector (NAV) updates in wireless LAN system, and device therefor
KR101962150B1 (en) 2016-04-26 2019-03-26 엘지전자 주식회사 NAV setting method considering BSS COLOR deactivation in wireless LAN system and apparatus therefor
EP3908047A1 (en) * 2016-04-26 2021-11-10 LG Electronics Inc. Nav setting method considering bss color disablement in wireless lan system and apparatus therefor
WO2017192693A1 (en) * 2016-05-06 2017-11-09 Qualcomm Incorporated Default spatial reuse modes
US11112248B2 (en) 2016-05-11 2021-09-07 Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Secondary sense loop with force feedback capability
US10365104B2 (en) 2016-05-11 2019-07-30 Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Digital controller for a MEMS gyroscope
US11751247B2 (en) 2016-05-13 2023-09-05 Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America Wireless station and communication method for determining transmission to another wireless station in a cell in view of an interference cell
US11405957B2 (en) 2016-05-13 2022-08-02 Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America Wireless station and communication method for determining transmission to another wireless station in a cell in view of an interference cell
EP3457802A4 (en) * 2016-05-13 2019-05-01 Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation of America Wireless station and communication method
CN109076604A (en) * 2016-05-13 2018-12-21 松下电器(美国)知识产权公司 Air station and communication means
CN109076604B (en) * 2016-05-13 2022-11-22 松下电器(美国)知识产权公司 Radio station and communication method
CN109314996A (en) * 2016-06-10 2019-02-05 高通股份有限公司 Method and apparatus for being reused on OBSS TXOP
KR20190008559A (en) * 2016-06-14 2019-01-24 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 A wireless communication method and a wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse operation
US11503636B2 (en) 2016-06-14 2022-11-15 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse operation
US11483865B2 (en) 2016-06-14 2022-10-25 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse operation
US11832304B2 (en) 2016-06-14 2023-11-28 Wilus Institute Of Standards And Technology Inc. Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse operation
KR102344180B1 (en) 2016-06-14 2021-12-28 주식회사 윌러스표준기술연구소 Wireless communication method and wireless communication terminal for spatial reuse operation
WO2018057363A1 (en) * 2016-09-22 2018-03-29 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for adaptive threshold selection in obss packet power save
US11382045B2 (en) 2020-09-30 2022-07-05 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. Device and method of handling a transmission based on spatial reuse
TWI749793B (en) * 2020-09-30 2021-12-11 瑞昱半導體股份有限公司 Device and method of handling a transmission based on spatial reuse
CN114363877A (en) * 2020-10-14 2022-04-15 瑞昱半导体股份有限公司 Apparatus and method for processing spatial reuse based transmission
CN114513841A (en) * 2022-04-18 2022-05-17 国网四川省电力公司电力科学研究院 Multi-AP cooperation power control method and system for power emergency communication system

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US9820162B2 (en) Adaptive CCA and TX power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks
EP3139671B1 (en) Spatial reuse parameters for opportunistic adaptive tpc and cca
WO2015112780A1 (en) Adaptive cca and tx power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks
EP3180956B1 (en) Prioritized channel access schemes with spatial reuse consideration
CN110024338B (en) Techniques to improve EDCA mechanisms in spatial multiplexing
US10178686B2 (en) Increased network throughput with CCA level enhancement
JP6356253B2 (en) Method and apparatus for transmitting frames in wireless LAN
EP2992724B1 (en) Systems and methods for fractional carrier sense multiple access with collision avoidance (csma/ca) for wlans
US9992797B2 (en) Wide bandwidth favored channel access methods in wireless local area networks
EP3024295B1 (en) Network allocation vector improvement for wireless networks
US20160286499A1 (en) Method for transmitting and receiving interference control signals based on power information, and apparatus therefor
RU2681350C1 (en) Station, access point and implemented wireless transfer treatment methods in a wireless communication network
EP3014795B1 (en) Beamforming enhancements for spatial reuse in wireless networks
WO2017063487A1 (en) System and Method for Spatial Reuse in Directional Random Access
EP3206444A1 (en) Adaptive cca and tx power level adjustment for dense deployment of wireless networks
US20240039610A1 (en) Communication Method and Communication Apparatus
US20220338256A1 (en) Wireless communication system, and wireless communication method
EP4360388A1 (en) Usage of csr resources by non-participating wireless station
WO2022223701A1 (en) Spatial-reuse based txop sharing for random access transmissions
CN117939607A (en) Controlling transmit power across a Basic Service Set (BSS)

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 15740314

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase

Ref document number: 15740314

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1