WO2008056235A2 - Control signaling techniques for wireless networks - Google Patents

Control signaling techniques for wireless networks Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2008056235A2
WO2008056235A2 PCT/IB2007/003380 IB2007003380W WO2008056235A2 WO 2008056235 A2 WO2008056235 A2 WO 2008056235A2 IB 2007003380 W IB2007003380 W IB 2007003380W WO 2008056235 A2 WO2008056235 A2 WO 2008056235A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
phase
frames
transmitting
during
control
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/IB2007/003380
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2008056235A3 (en
Inventor
Klaus Doppler
Lars Lindh
Original Assignee
Nokia Corporation
Nokia Inc.
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 Nokia Corporation, Nokia Inc. filed Critical Nokia Corporation
Priority to EP07825606.2A priority Critical patent/EP2084829A4/en
Publication of WO2008056235A2 publication Critical patent/WO2008056235A2/en
Publication of WO2008056235A3 publication Critical patent/WO2008056235A3/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L12/00Data switching networks
    • H04L12/66Arrangements for connecting between networks having differing types of switching systems, e.g. gateways
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L1/00Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
    • H04L1/12Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel
    • H04L1/16Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel in which the return channel carries supervisory signals, e.g. repetition request signals
    • H04L1/1607Details of the supervisory signal
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L1/00Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
    • H04L1/12Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel
    • H04L1/16Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel in which the return channel carries supervisory signals, e.g. repetition request signals
    • H04L1/18Automatic repetition systems, e.g. Van Duuren systems
    • H04L1/1829Arrangements specially adapted for the receiver end
    • H04L1/1854Scheduling and prioritising arrangements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L1/00Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
    • H04L2001/0092Error control systems characterised by the topology of the transmission link
    • H04L2001/0097Relays

Definitions

  • WLAN Wireless Local Area Network
  • AP Access Points
  • a wireless relay network may include a multi-hop system in which end nodes such as mobile stations (MSs) or mobile nodes (MNs) may be coupled to an Access Gateway (AG) (also known as Access Point or Base Station) via one or more relay nodes (RNs) (also known as relay stations (RSs)).
  • AG Access Gateway
  • RNs relay nodes
  • traffic between MNs and the AG may pass through and/or be processed by the RNs.
  • RNs also known as relay stations (RSs)
  • Various example embodiments are disclosed relating to relay networks or multi-hop networks, and also relating to control signaling techniques for wireless networks.
  • a method of transmitting data may include transmitting a data frame to a first node and a control frame to a second node during a first phase of a multi-phase operation, wherein the control frame is transmitted to the second node using a dedicated control channel.
  • a method of transmitting data using a multi-phase operation may include transmitting frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase, and transmitting frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
  • a method of transmitting and receiving data using a multi-phase operation may include transmitting at least data frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase, receiving frames in an uplink direction during a second phase, receiving frames in a downlink direction during a third phase, and transmitting at least data frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a fourth phase.
  • a method may include transmitting at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction, as needed, during a first phase, and transmitting at least data frames in a second direction and control frames in a first direction, as needed, during a second phase.
  • a method may include performing the following by a first group of wireless nodes in a relay network: transmitting at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase, and transmitting at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase; and performing the following by a second group of wireless nodes in a relay network: transmitting at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase; and transmitting at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a third phase.
  • an apparatus for wireless communication, the apparatus configured to: transmit frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase; and transmit frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
  • the apparatus may be a relay node, the relay node further including a controller, a memory and a wireless transceiver.
  • an apparatus for wireless communications may include a controller, a memory coupled to the controller, and a wireless transceiver coupled to the controller.
  • the apparatus may be configured to transmit at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase; receive frames in the second direction during a second phase; receive frames in the first direction during a third phase; and transmit at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase.
  • the first direction may be a downlink direction and the second direction may be an uplink direction.
  • the second direction may be a downlink direction and the first direction may be an uplink direction.
  • an apparatus may include a first group of wireless nodes including one or more nodes, wherein the first group of wireless nodes is configured to: transmit at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase; and transmit at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase; and a second group of wireless nodes including one or more nodes, wherein the second group of wireless nodes is configured to: transmit at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase; and transmit at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a third phase.
  • the first group of wireless nodes may include one or more relay nodes at a first level of a network
  • the second group of wireless nodes may include one or more relay nodes at a second level of a network.
  • a relay node may be provided.
  • the relay node may be configured to operate in an access radio network for wireless media coupling one or more mobile nodes and the relay node.
  • the relay node may also be configured to operate in a mesh radio network for wireless media coupling the relay node to an access node or one or more other relay nodes, the wireless media for the access radio network being substantially orthogonal to the wireless media for the mesh radio network, the relay node further configured to: transmit frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase; and transmit frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating a relay network according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 5 is a diagram illustrating a tree structure for a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating a 4-phase operation for transmission for a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 7 is a diagram illustrating an allocation of uplink and downlink transmissions according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrating a 4-phase operation for transmission for a wireless network according to another example embodiment.
  • FIG. 9 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 10 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node according to another example embodiment.
  • FIG. 11 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node according to yet another example embodiment.
  • FIG. 12 is a block diagram illustrating an apparatus that may be provided in a wireless node according to an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network 102 according to an example embodiment.
  • Wireless network 102 may include a number of wireless nodes or stations, such as an access gateway (AG) 104 (or base station or access point) and one or more mobile stations or mobile nodes (MNs), such as MNs 108 and 110. While only one AG and two mobile nodes are shown in wireless network 102, any number of AGs and mobile nodes may be provided. Each node in network 102 (e.g., MNs 108, 110) may be in wireless communication with the AG 104, and may even be in direct communication with each other.
  • AG 104 may be coupled to a fixed network, such as a Local Area Network (LAN), Wide Area Network (WAN), the Internet, etc., and may also be coupled to other wireless networks.
  • LAN Local Area Network
  • WAN Wide Area Network
  • the Internet etc.
  • one or more relay nodes or relay stations may also be provided in wireless network 102, e.g., to improve wireless coverage or data throughput.
  • a wireless relay network may be an example of a multi-hop system in which end nodes, for example, mobile nodes (MNs) or mobile stations may be coupled to an access gateway (AG) or base station via one or more relay nodes (RNs) or relay stations.
  • MNs mobile nodes
  • AG access gateway
  • RNs relay nodes
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
  • a mobile station (or mobile node) MS 208 may initially communicate directly with a base station BS (or AG) 204, for example, and a subscriber station (or other MN) 210 may communicate with the base station BS 204 via a relay station RS (or relay node) 220.
  • the mobile station 208 may travel or move with respect to base station BS 204.
  • the mobile station MS 208 may move out of range of the base station BS 204, and may thus begin communicating with the base station 204 via the relay station 220 as shown in FIG. 2.
  • FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network 302 according to an example embodiment.
  • Wireless network 302 may include a number of wireless nodes or stations, such as an access gateway (AG) 304, relay nodes RNl 320 and RN2 330, a group of mobile nodes, such as MNl 322 and MN2 324 communicating with relay node RNl 320, and mobile nodes MN3 332 and MN4 334 communicating with relay node RN2330.
  • relay node RN2330 may also communicate with relay node RNl 320. While only one AG, two RNs, and four MNs are shown in wireless network 302, any number may be provided.
  • AG 304 may be coupled to a fixed network 306, such as a Wide Area Network (WAN) 3 the Internet, etc., and may also be coupled to other wireless networks.
  • the group of nodes MNl 322, MN2324, and RN2 330 may communicate with the AG 304 via the relay node RNl 320.
  • the group of nodes MN3 332, MN4 334, may communicate with AG 304 via the relay node RN2 330, which may, for example, communicate with the AG 304 via the relay node RNl 320, for example.
  • Wireless network 302 may be an example of a relay network or multi-hop network.
  • the mobile nodes 322, 324, 332, 334 in FIG. 3 may include, for example, mobile telephones, cell phones, WLAN or WiMAX phones, wireless personal digital assistants (PDAs), or other types of wireless devices, or mobile stations/nodes.
  • the AG may refer to an access gateway, base station, access point or similar device, and may be coupled to a wired network such as the Internet.
  • the relay nodes e.g., RNl, RN2
  • the various example embodiments described herein may be applicable to a wide variety of example networks and technologies, such as WLAN networks (e.g., IEEE 802.11 type networks), IEEE 802.16 WiMAX networks, relay networks, 802.16 Mobile Multi-hop Relay (MMR) networks, as referenced in IEEE 802.16 WG, WiMedia networks, Ultra Wide Band networks, cellular networks, radio networks, or other wireless networks.
  • WLAN networks e.g., IEEE 802.11 type networks
  • IEEE 802.16 WiMAX networks e.g., IEEE 802.16 WiMAX networks
  • relay networks e.g., 802.16 Mobile Multi-hop Relay (MMR) networks
  • MMR Mobile Multi-hop Relay
  • FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating a relay network 400 according to an example embodiment.
  • MNs mobile nodes
  • IP Internet Protocol
  • Access network 402 may include, for example, one or more relay nodes (RNs) and one or more access gateways (AGs).
  • RNs relay nodes
  • AGs access gateways
  • MNs 403, 404 and 405 are directly coupled (e.g., wirelessly) to RN 407.
  • One or more, or even a mesh of relay nodes, such as RNs 408, 410, 412 , 414, 416, etc., may be provided to allow MNs 403-405 to communicate with AGs 420 or 422, for example.
  • the network topology or relay network 400 illustrated in FIG. 4 may be considered to include an access radio network 440 and a mesh radio network 450.
  • the access radio network 440 may include the MN- RN and AG-MN wireless interface or wireless media between mobile nodes (MN) 403, 404, 405, etc. and one or more relay nodes (RNs).
  • a mesh radio network 450 may include the RN-RN and RN-AG wireless interface or wireless media, such as the wireless media for RNs to communicate with other RNs, and RNs to communicate with AGs.
  • the wireless media (which may include one or more channels) of access radio network 440 may, for example, be separate or orthogonal from the wireless media for mesh radio network 450. Orthogonality between the two networks may be accomplished by using different channels (e.g., different channels or frequencies, different time slots, and/or different frequency hopping sequences, etc), for instance. For example, if OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) is used, different sets of frequencies or subcarriers may be used for access radio network 440 and mesh radio network 450. Or, for example, if OFDMA (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access) is used, then different frequencies (or subcarriers) and/or time slots may be used between access radio network 440 and mesh radio network 450.
  • OFDM Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
  • OFDMA Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access
  • Orthogonality or independence between access radio network 440 and mesh radio network 450 may be accomplished, for example, by using different wireless technology for these two networks.
  • a cellular or GSM (Global System for Mobile Communication) wireless technology may be used for access radio network 440
  • a WLAN or Wi-MAX (or other) wireless technology may be used for mesh radio network 450.
  • RN 407 may include two wireless transceivers, including a first cellular transceiver for communicating via the access radio network with MNs 403, 404, 405, etc., and a second WLAN or WiMAX transceiver for communicating with other RNs or AGs via mesh radio network 450.
  • a same wireless technology may be used in both wireless networks 440 and 450, for example.
  • mesh radio network 450 may have wireless media (or channels) orthogonal or separate from (or even using different wireless technology) access radio network 440
  • a legacy technology may be employed for mobile nodes (MNs) of network 440
  • more advanced or newer technology may be used for mesh radio network 450 (e.g., for RNs and AGs).
  • This may also allow protocols, rules, or other aspects of communication or technology for mesh radio network 450 to be independently changed and improved without creating incompatibility issues with existing handsets or mobile nodes (MNs), for example, although this is merely an example embodiment, and the disclosure is not limited thereto.
  • FIG. 5 is a diagram illustrating a tree structure for a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
  • Network 500 which may be a mesh network or relay network, may include an access gateway (AG) 530 and one or more levels of relay nodes.
  • a level may, for example, refer to a number of hops that a RN may be from the AG, or a number of hops the RNs are from a MN, for example.
  • RNs may be grouped together based on a number of hops they are from the AG, or a number of hops from a MN, etc. Although this is just an example, and any numbering system or numbering convention may be used to identify levels or groups of RNs.
  • a first level (of RNs) 520 may include, for example, RNs 522, 524 and 526, and a second level of RNs may include RNs 512, 514 and 516, although any number of RNs may be provided at each level.
  • the network 500 may include any number of levels of RNs, such as a third level of RNs, a fourth level of RNs, etc.
  • the one or more RNs may operate in a time division duplex (TDD) manner, where each RN may transmit during a time slot or phase, e.g., as part of TDD or OFDMA or other modulation scheme.
  • TDD time division duplex
  • Each RN may typically either transmit or receive, but does not typically transmit and receive at the same time.
  • it may be desirable for adjacent RNs to avoid transmitting across a shared wireless media at the same time, which may cause collisions, interference, etc.
  • a technique may be provided to transmit data using a multi-phase operation.
  • a first group 540 of RNs may transmit, and a second group 550 may receive, during a first phase (or time slot), while the second group 550 of RNs may transmit and the first group 540 may receive during a second phase or time slot.
  • This is merely an example.
  • one group of the RNs (or nodes) is transmitting, and the other group is receiving.
  • roles may be reversed, allowing the group that was receiving to now transmit, and the group that was transmitting to now receive.
  • this division of transmission into phases may include separate phases for uplink and downlink transmission, where uplink may generally refer to a transmission towards the AG, while downlink may refer to a transmission away from the AG (e.g., towards a MN).
  • the groups of wireless nodes may include alternate levels (or alternate rows) of nodes or RNs, to allow efficient use of the wireless media.
  • a first group of RNs 540 may include rows 1 and 3, while a second group of RNs may include rows 2 and 4, for example. Other levels may also be included.
  • the first group of nodes 540 may transmit during a first phase, while a second group 550 receives during the first phase. Similarly, during a second phase, the second group 550 may transmit while the first group 540 may receive.
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating a 4-phase operation for transmission for a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
  • the phases may include phase 1, phase 2, phase 3 and phase 4, as examples.
  • a first group of wireless nodes may be simplified as first level 520 (but may include other levels, such as a third level), and a second group of wireless nodes may be simplified as a second level 510 (and may include other levels of nodes or RNs, such as a fourth level).
  • Resources e.g., time slots or other resources
  • the media may be reserved or allocated to nodes or groups of nodes, or resources may be obtained based on a contention-based channel access, for example.
  • phase 1 610 (which may include a timeslot or group of timeslots)
  • nodes of a first level 520 may receive frames (e.g., data frames, such as unicast, broadcast or multicast, and/or control frames, or other frames) in a downlink direction (from AG), while nodes of second level 510 may transmit frames (e.g., data frames, control frames, or other frames) in a downlink direction.
  • frames e.g., data frames, such as unicast, broadcast or multicast, and/or control frames, or other frames
  • a downlink direction from AG
  • nodes of second level 510 may transmit frames (e.g., data frames, control frames, or other frames) in a downlink direction.
  • one group of wireless nodes may receive frames in a downlink direction while another group (e.g., second level 510) may transmit frames in a downlink direction.
  • a third level (not shown), if present, may be grouped with first level 520 and may receive in a downlink direction during phase 1 610.
  • a fourth level (not shown), if present, may be grouped with second level 510 and may transmit in a downlink direction during phase 1 610.
  • phase 2 620 (which may include a timeslot or group of timeslots), a first level 520 of nodes may transmit in the uplink direction (e.g., to AG 530), while a second level 510 of nodes may receive in the uplink direction (e.g., from a third level, not shown).
  • the third level (like the first level) may, if present, transmit in the uplink direction
  • the fourth level (like the second level), if present, may receive in the uplink direction, for example (not shown).
  • the first level 520 (and third level, not shown) of nodes may transmit in the downlink direction, while the second level 510 (and fourth level) of nodes may receive in the downlink direction.
  • the first level 520 may transmit (e.g., during one or more timeslots) downlink to the second level 510; the second level 510 may receive in a downlink direction from the first level 520, etc.
  • the first level 520 (and third level not shown) may receive in an uplink direction, and the second level 510 (and fourth level not shown) may transmit in an uplink direction.
  • it may add additional delay for circuitry of a wireless node to switch from a receiving mode to transmitting mode, or to switch from a transmitting mode to a receive mode. Therefore, in an example embodiment, although not required, it may be beneficial (e.g., to reduce delay) to arrange the phases of operation to decrease a number of transmit-receive mode switchings. For example, although not required, the 4 phases may be arranged to perform two transmit phases, followed by two receive phases, followed by two transmit phases, etc., for each node.
  • first level 520 of nodes may perform the following, according to phases 1-4: receive (DL), transmit (UL), transmit (DL), and receive (UL), and then repeat the 4 phases, where UL refers to uplink direction and DL refers to downlink direction.
  • the phases 1-4 may include, for example: transmit (DL), receive (UL), receive (DL), and transmit (UL), and then repeat.
  • transmit (DL), receive (UL), receive (DL), and transmit (UL), and then repeat are just some examples of how the order of phases may be arranged, although other orders may be used.
  • the order for any node for the phases may be viewed as: T, T, R, R, T, T, R, R, T, T, ..., where T refers to transmit and R refers to receive.
  • the exact location of phase 1, phase 2, phase 3 and phase 4 in such a sequence may vary, based on where phase 1 is selected to begin.
  • each node or RN may be provided an opportunity to transmit and receive both in the uplink and downlink directions.
  • one or more of the nodes or RNs may include an ARQ (automatic repeat request), or other protocol, where the node may send an acknowledgement (ACK) to acknowledge successful receipt of data frames, and may send a negative acknowledgement (NACK) to indicate receipt of a corrupted frame or packet, thus indicating that the corrupted or incorrectly received frame or packet should be retransmitted.
  • ACK acknowledgement
  • NACK negative acknowledgement
  • other control frames or control signals may be transmitted as well.
  • a number of applications may be sensitive to network delay. Also, the delay across a multi-hop network, such as a relay network or mesh network, may often be greater due to the higher number of hops. Therefore, it may be desirable to implement techniques where possible to decrease the delay for transmitting an ACK/NACK or for retransmitting a packet, e.g., to decrease network delay.
  • first level 520 of nodes may receive in the uplink direction. However, first level 520 do not transmit downlink until the subsequent phase 3, which is 3 phases later. Also, first level 520 of nodes may receive in the downlink direction at phase 1, and may, at least in theory, be able to transmit an ACK/NACK in the uplink direction at phase 2, if the node has processed the received packet to determine if an ACK or NACK should be sent.
  • first level node may receive a frame during one phase, and may process that received frame during a next phase, e.g., while transmitting or receiving other frames. Therefore, in the example case where first level 520 may not have sufficient time to process the frame received in phase 1 before phase 2 begins, the first level 520 may wait 4 phases, until phase 2 again (of the next cycle of phases) before the first level node 520 will have an opportunity to transmit an ACK or NACK in the uplink direction to AG 530. Such a significant delay (e.g., 3 or 4 phases) before transmitting ACKs/NACKs or other control frames may be undesirable, at least for some applications.
  • FIG. 7 is a diagram illustrating an allocation of uplink and downlink transmissions according to an example embodiment.
  • a mesh network or relay network may use OFDMA technology as an underlying physical layer and resource allocations may be made, for example, in time (e.g., time slots) and frequency (subcarriers). Also, different frequency hopping sequences may be used, etc. Other technologies may be used to allocate resources.
  • a granularity of time slots may be one OFDMA symbol, for example. Separate time slots may be used for DL and UL traffic. DL and UL traffic may include time slots for each RN and for the whole network.
  • downlink (DL) allocation may often be greater or longer than uplink (UL) allocation.
  • the DL transmission may, for example, begin with a preamble (pa).
  • a node transmits it may also process a packet or frame it previously received, for example.
  • the node may also be preprocessing a frame or packet to be transmitted during a next phase.
  • Example UL and DL allocations are shown in FIG. 7, e.g., for level 1 520 for phases 1-4.
  • Phase 1 may include receiving frames in the DL direction.
  • Phase 2 may include transmitting (or an opportunity to transmit) in the UL direction.
  • Phase 3 may include transmitting (or an opportunity to transmit) in the DL direction.
  • phase 4 for level 1 520 may include receiving in the UL direction, for example.
  • FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrating a 4-phase operation for transmission for a wireless network according to another example embodiment.
  • network delay e.g., delays in sending ACKs/NACKs
  • a node or RN may transmit frames (e.g., data frames and/or control frames) in a first direction and may transmit control frames or control messages (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in a second direction during a first phase.
  • the node or RN may transmit frames (e.g., data frames and/or control frames) in the second direction and may transmit control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in the first direction during a second or other phase.
  • a dedicated control channel e.g., separate subcarrier and/or time slot
  • the control frames e.g., ACKs/NACKs.
  • the node may transmit a data frame to a first node while transmitting an ACK/NACK (or other control frame) to a second node during a first phase.
  • the first and second nodes may, for example, be located in different directions (e.g., a first node is upstream and the second node is downstream).
  • a RN or node may transmit a data frame to a first node and an ACK/NACK (or other control frame) to a second node during a particular phase (which may include one or more time slots), where the first and second nodes may be located in the same direction (e.g., both first and second nodes may be both upstream or both downstream).
  • a node to transmit data or other frames, e.g., in a first direction and being permitted to transmit control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs), e.g., in a second direction during a same phase (e.g., timeslot or group of timeslots that are part of the phase), a faster acknowledgement or negative acknowledgement may be provided, which may decrease network delays.
  • control frames e.g., ACKs/NACKs
  • the first and second directions may refer to uplink or downlink directions, or downlink and uplink directions. Transmitting in a particular direction (either UL or DL) does not necessarily mean that a directional antenna is used or a directional transmission is performed. Any kind of antenna may be used, such as omnidirectional antennas, directional antennas, or other antennas, etc. Rather, transmitting in an UL or DL direction may, for example, indicate that a frame is being transmitted or directed to a node that is located in a direction that may be UL(or upstream) or DL (or downstream) direction, for example.
  • transmitting in a DL direction may include transmitting (e.g., using a directional, omnidirectional or other antenna) a data frame to a mobile node (which is located downstream from the transmitting node).
  • transmitting in an UL direction may include transmitting a frame to an AG (which is located upstream from the transitting node), although the frame may pass through one or more intermediate KNs before reaching the AG.
  • the solid lines may indicate transmission (or permission to transmit) of frames (e.g., data frames, control frames, and/or other frames), while dashed lines may indicate transmission (or permission to transmit) control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs or other control signals).
  • frames e.g., data frames, control frames, and/or other frames
  • dashed lines may indicate transmission (or permission to transmit) control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs or other control signals).
  • second level 510 of nodes may transmit frames (e.g., data and/or control frames) in a DL direction indicated by the solid lines, while transmitting (or being permitted to transmit) control signals (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in an UL direction indicated by the dashed line.
  • Phase 1 (and the other phases) may include one or more channels or resources, such as multiple frequencies (subcarriers) and/or time slots, for example.
  • a dedicated resource or channel e.g., subcarrier and/or time slot
  • second level nodes 510 may transmit a data frame in a DL direction (e.g, to a MN) using a first channel (e.g., a subcarrier and/or timeslot) while transmitting ACKs/NACK to AG (UL), during phase 1.
  • a first channel e.g., a subcarrier and/or timeslot
  • different time slots may be used for data frames (solid lines) and ACKs/NACKs (dashed lines), or different subcarriers for the data and control frames may be used on the same time slot for phase 1.
  • a dedicated control channel may be employed to transmit ACKs/NACKs, for example.
  • AG 530 may also transmit DL during phase 1.
  • second level 510 of nodes may receive data or other frames in an UL direction (e.g., from third level) and may receive control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in a DL direction from the first level 520. Also during phase 2, the first level 520 of relay nodes may transmit data or other frames in an UL direction and may transmit control frames in a DL direction,
  • first level 520 may transmit data or other frames in a DL direction and may transmit control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in an UL direction.
  • Second level 510 nodes may receive data or other frames in a DL direction, and may also receive control frames in an UL direction from a third level (not shown) if present.
  • first level 520 may transmit data or other frames in an UL direction, and may transmit control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in a DL direction.
  • control frames e.g., ACKs/NACKs
  • the 4-phase operation illustrated in FIG. 8 may allow an efficient use of resources for a network, such as a relay network or mesh network, for example.
  • a first level ELN 520 may receive in a DL direction a data frame in phase 1 (from AG), may process or decode the received frame during phase 2 while transmitting other data or frames, and may forward the received data frame (that was received in phase 1), and then may forward the processed frame to second level 510 during phase 3. This may provide sufficient time for a node to process a received frame before forwarding the frame, but not provide too much delay between receipt and forwarding of the frame that would introduce unnecessary delay.
  • This is merely an example embodiment, and other embodiments or examples may be used.
  • first level 520 may receive data frames in a DL direction in phase 1 810, and may transmit ACKs/NACKs in an UL direction during either phase 2 820 or phase 3 830. As noted, in some cases there may not be sufficient time for the node to receive and process a frame during phase 1, and then transmit an ACK NACK during phase 2 820.
  • first lev&l node 520 may transmit an ACK or NACK, e.g., on a dedicated control channel, in an UL direction during phase 3 830 may allow transmission of ACKs/NACKs up to 2 or 3 phases earlier, which may decrease network delay.
  • second level 510 may receive a data frame in a DL direction in phase 3, and may transmit an ACK/NACK in an UL direction in phase 3, e.g., on a dedicated control channel.
  • the network may include a first group of nodes (e.g., second level 510) that may transmit data or other frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase, and transmit data frames in a second direction and control frames in a first direction during a fourth phase (e.g., second level 510 may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in a UL direction during phase 1, and may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 4) .
  • a first group of nodes e.g., second level 510
  • second level 510 may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in a UL direction during phase 1
  • may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 4 may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase
  • the network may also include a second group of nodes (e.g., first level 520) that may transmit data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase, and transmit data frames in the first direction and control frames in the second direction during a third phase (e.g., first level 520 may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 2, and may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in an UL direction during phase 3).
  • first level 520 may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 2
  • first level 520 may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in an UL direction during phase 3
  • resources e.g., different frequencies, time slots, hopping sequences, and the like
  • control channels to allow fast ACKs/NACKs to be transmitted.
  • only certain high priority applications may be permitted to use the fast control channels, such as Voice over IP (VoIP) applications, interactive games or other high priority applications that may be sensitive to network delay.
  • VoIP Voice over IP
  • ACs Access Categories
  • the dedicated control channel(s) may be used only for NACKs, in order to decrease load or traffic through the high priority channels, for example.
  • FIG. 9 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node (e.g., relay node) according to an example embodiment.
  • a frame e.g., data frame
  • a control frame may be transmitted in an uplink direction during a first phase.
  • a frame e.g., data frame
  • a control frame may be transmitted in a downlink direction during a second phase.
  • FIG. 10 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node (e.g., a relay node) according to an example embodiment.
  • a data frame may be transmitted in a downlink direction and a control frame may be transmitted in an uplink direction during a first phase.
  • a frame may be received in an uplink direction during a second phase.
  • control frames may be received in a downlink direction as well at 1020.
  • a frame may be received in a downlink direction during a third phase. In an example embodiment, control frames may also be received via an uplink direction during the third phase.
  • a data frame may be transmitted in an uplink direction and a control frame may be transmitted in a downlink direction during a fourth phase.
  • FIG. 11 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node (e.g., a relay node) according to an example embodiment.
  • a node e.g., a relay node
  • a first group of nodes may transmit data or other frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase, and transmit data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase (e.g., second level 510 may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in a UL direction during phase 1, and may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 4) .
  • a second group of nodes (e.g., first level 520) that may transmit data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase, and transmit data frames in the first direction and control frames in the second direction during a third phase (e.g., first level 520 may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 2, and may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in an UL direction during phase 3).
  • FIG. 12 is a block diagram illustrating an apparatus 1200 that may be provided in a wireless node according to an example embodiment.
  • the wireless node e.g. station or AP
  • the wireless node may include, for example, a wireless transceiver 1202 to transmit and receive signals, a controller 1204 to control operation of the station and execute instructions or software, and a memory 1206 to store data and/or instructions.
  • Controller 1204 may be programmable and capable of executing software or other instructions stored in memory or on other computer media to perform the various tasks and functions described above, such as one or more the tasks or methods described above.
  • a storage medium may be provided that includes stored instructions, when executed by a controller or processor that may result in the controller 1204, or other controller or processor, performing one or more of the functions or tasks described above.
  • Implementations of the various techniques described herein may be implemented in digital electronic circuitry, or in computer hardware, firmware, software, or in combinations of them. Implementations may implemented as a computer program product, i.e., a computer program tangibly embodied in an information carrier, e.g., in a machine-readable storage device or in a propagated signal, for execution by, or to control the operation of, data processing apparatus, e.g., a programmable processor, a computer, or multiple computers.
  • data processing apparatus e.g., a programmable processor, a computer, or multiple computers.
  • a computer program such as the computer program(s) described above, can be written in any form of programming language, including compiled or interpreted languages, and can be deployed in any form, including as a stand-alone program or as a module, component, subroutine, or other unit suitable for use in a computing environment.
  • a computer program can be deployed to be executed on one computer or on multiple computers at one site or distributed across multiple sites and interconnected by a communication network.
  • Method steps may be performed by one or more programmable processors executing a computer program to perform functions by operating on input data and generating output. Method steps also may be performed by, and an apparatus may be implemented as, special purpose logic circuitry, e.g., an FPGA (field programmable gate array) or an ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit).
  • FPGA field programmable gate array
  • ASIC application-specific integrated circuit

Abstract

Various example embodiments are disclosed relating to wireless networks, such as relay networks or multi-hop networks, and also relating to control signaling techniques for wireless networks. In an example embodiment, a method or technique may include transmitting (910) (e.g., data or control) frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase, and transmitting (920) (e.g., data or control) frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.

Description

CONTROL SIGNALING TECHNIQUES FOR WIRELESS NETWORKS
Inventor(s):
Klaus Doppler
Lars Lindh
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS [0001 ] This application claims priority based on United States Provisional
Application No. 60/864,704, filed on November 7, 2006, entitled, "Control Signaling Techniques for Wireless Networks," the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference, and Unites States Patent Application No. xx/xxx,xxx filed on November 5, 2007, entitled "Control Signaling Techniques for Wireless Networks," the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
BACKGROUND
[0002] The rapid diffusion of Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) access and the increasing demand for WLAN coverage is driving the installation of a very large number of Access Points (AP). The most common WLAN technology is described in the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE 802.11 family of industry specifications, such as specifications for IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g and IEEE 802.11a. Other wireless technologies are being developed, such as IEEE 802.16 or WiMAX technology, etc.
[0003] As an example, a wireless relay network may include a multi-hop system in which end nodes such as mobile stations (MSs) or mobile nodes (MNs) may be coupled to an Access Gateway (AG) (also known as Access Point or Base Station) via one or more relay nodes (RNs) (also known as relay stations (RSs)). Thus, traffic between MNs and the AG may pass through and/or be processed by the RNs. However, such a relay network may typically include multiple hops between an AG and a MN, which may in some cases introduce significant latency or delay for communications.
[0004] Techniques are desirable that may decrease latency or delay for wireless networks, such as for multi-hop or relay networks. SUMMARY
[0005] Various example embodiments are disclosed relating to relay networks or multi-hop networks, and also relating to control signaling techniques for wireless networks.
[0006] In an example embodiment, a method of transmitting data may include transmitting a data frame to a first node and a control frame to a second node during a first phase of a multi-phase operation, wherein the control frame is transmitted to the second node using a dedicated control channel.
[0007] In another example embodiment, a method of transmitting data using a multi-phase operation may include transmitting frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase, and transmitting frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
[0008] In another example embodiment, a method of transmitting and receiving data using a multi-phase operation may include transmitting at least data frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase, receiving frames in an uplink direction during a second phase, receiving frames in a downlink direction during a third phase, and transmitting at least data frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a fourth phase.
[0009] In another example embodiment, a method may include transmitting at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction, as needed, during a first phase, and transmitting at least data frames in a second direction and control frames in a first direction, as needed, during a second phase.
[0010] In another example embodiment, a method may include performing the following by a first group of wireless nodes in a relay network: transmitting at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase, and transmitting at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase; and performing the following by a second group of wireless nodes in a relay network: transmitting at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase; and transmitting at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a third phase. [0011 ] In another example embodiment, an apparatus (e.g., a relay node) for wireless communication is provided, the apparatus configured to: transmit frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase; and transmit frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase. In an example embodiment, the apparatus may be a relay node, the relay node further including a controller, a memory and a wireless transceiver.
[0012] In another example embodiment, an apparatus for wireless communications may include a controller, a memory coupled to the controller, and a wireless transceiver coupled to the controller. The apparatus may be configured to transmit at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase; receive frames in the second direction during a second phase; receive frames in the first direction during a third phase; and transmit at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase.
[0013] In an example embodiment, the first direction may be a downlink direction and the second direction may be an uplink direction. In another example embodiment, the second direction may be a downlink direction and the first direction may be an uplink direction.
[0014] In yet another example embodiment, an apparatus may include a first group of wireless nodes including one or more nodes, wherein the first group of wireless nodes is configured to: transmit at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase; and transmit at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase; and a second group of wireless nodes including one or more nodes, wherein the second group of wireless nodes is configured to: transmit at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase; and transmit at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a third phase.
[0015] In an example embodiment, the first group of wireless nodes may include one or more relay nodes at a first level of a network, and the second group of wireless nodes may include one or more relay nodes at a second level of a network.
[0016] In yet another example embodiment, a relay node may be provided. The relay node may be configured to operate in an access radio network for wireless media coupling one or more mobile nodes and the relay node. The relay node may also be configured to operate in a mesh radio network for wireless media coupling the relay node to an access node or one or more other relay nodes, the wireless media for the access radio network being substantially orthogonal to the wireless media for the mesh radio network, the relay node further configured to: transmit frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase; and transmit frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
[0017] The details of one or more implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features will be apparent from the description and drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
[0019] FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
[0020] FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
[0021 ] FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating a relay network according to an example embodiment.
[0022] FIG. 5 is a diagram illustrating a tree structure for a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
[0023] FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating a 4-phase operation for transmission for a wireless network according to an example embodiment.
[0024] FIG. 7 is a diagram illustrating an allocation of uplink and downlink transmissions according to an example embodiment.
[0025] FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrating a 4-phase operation for transmission for a wireless network according to another example embodiment.
[0026] FIG. 9 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node according to an example embodiment.
[0027] FIG. 10 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node according to another example embodiment.
[0028] FIG. 11 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node according to yet another example embodiment.
[0029] FIG. 12 is a block diagram illustrating an apparatus that may be provided in a wireless node according to an example embodiment.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] Referring to the Figures in which like numerals indicate like elements, FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network 102 according to an example embodiment. Wireless network 102 may include a number of wireless nodes or stations, such as an access gateway (AG) 104 (or base station or access point) and one or more mobile stations or mobile nodes (MNs), such as MNs 108 and 110. While only one AG and two mobile nodes are shown in wireless network 102, any number of AGs and mobile nodes may be provided. Each node in network 102 (e.g., MNs 108, 110) may be in wireless communication with the AG 104, and may even be in direct communication with each other. Although not shown, AG 104 may be coupled to a fixed network, such as a Local Area Network (LAN), Wide Area Network (WAN), the Internet, etc., and may also be coupled to other wireless networks.
[0031] Although not shown in FIG. 1, in an example embodiment, one or more relay nodes or relay stations may also be provided in wireless network 102, e.g., to improve wireless coverage or data throughput. A wireless relay network may be an example of a multi-hop system in which end nodes, for example, mobile nodes (MNs) or mobile stations may be coupled to an access gateway (AG) or base station via one or more relay nodes (RNs) or relay stations.
[0032] FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network according to an example embodiment. According to an example embodiment, a mobile station (or mobile node) MS 208 may initially communicate directly with a base station BS (or AG) 204, for example, and a subscriber station (or other MN) 210 may communicate with the base station BS 204 via a relay station RS (or relay node) 220. In an example embodiment, the mobile station 208 may travel or move with respect to base station BS 204. For example, the mobile station MS 208 may move out of range of the base station BS 204, and may thus begin communicating with the base station 204 via the relay station 220 as shown in FIG. 2.
[0033] FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless network 302 according to an example embodiment. Wireless network 302 may include a number of wireless nodes or stations, such as an access gateway (AG) 304, relay nodes RNl 320 and RN2 330, a group of mobile nodes, such as MNl 322 and MN2 324 communicating with relay node RNl 320, and mobile nodes MN3 332 and MN4 334 communicating with relay node RN2330. In an example embodiment, relay node RN2330 may also communicate with relay node RNl 320. While only one AG, two RNs, and four MNs are shown in wireless network 302, any number may be provided. AG 304 may be coupled to a fixed network 306, such as a Wide Area Network (WAN)3 the Internet, etc., and may also be coupled to other wireless networks. The group of nodes MNl 322, MN2324, and RN2 330 may communicate with the AG 304 via the relay node RNl 320. The group of nodes MN3 332, MN4 334, may communicate with AG 304 via the relay node RN2 330, which may, for example, communicate with the AG 304 via the relay node RNl 320, for example. Wireless network 302 may be an example of a relay network or multi-hop network.
[0034] In an example embodiment, the mobile nodes 322, 324, 332, 334 in FIG. 3 may include, for example, mobile telephones, cell phones, WLAN or WiMAX phones, wireless personal digital assistants (PDAs), or other types of wireless devices, or mobile stations/nodes. The AG may refer to an access gateway, base station, access point or similar device, and may be coupled to a wired network such as the Internet. The relay nodes (e.g., RNl, RN2) may include, for example, wireless nodes coupled between an AG (or other RN) and one or more mobile nodes, oi between two RNs. In some cases, there may be, for example, several RNs coupled in series between a MN and an AG, for example.
[0035] The various example embodiments described herein may be applicable to a wide variety of example networks and technologies, such as WLAN networks (e.g., IEEE 802.11 type networks), IEEE 802.16 WiMAX networks, relay networks, 802.16 Mobile Multi-hop Relay (MMR) networks, as referenced in IEEE 802.16 WG, WiMedia networks, Ultra Wide Band networks, cellular networks, radio networks, or other wireless networks. In another example embodiment, the various examples and embodiments may be applied, for example, to a mesh wireless network, where a plurality of mesh points may be coupled together via wired or wireless links. The various example embodiments described herein may be applied to wireless networks, both in an infrastructure mode where an AP or base station may communicate with a station (e.g., communication occurs through APs), as well as an ad-hoc mode in which wireless stations may communicate directly via a peer-to-peer network, for example. [0036] FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating a relay network 400 according to an example embodiment. As shown in the example of FIG. 4, one or more mobile nodes (MNs) are coupled to an IP (e.g., Internet Protocol) backbone 430 (such as the Internet) via an access network 402. Access network 402 may include, for example, one or more relay nodes (RNs) and one or more access gateways (AGs). For example, mobile nodes (MNs) 403, 404 and 405 are directly coupled (e.g., wirelessly) to RN 407. One or more, or even a mesh of relay nodes, such as RNs 408, 410, 412 , 414, 416, etc., may be provided to allow MNs 403-405 to communicate with AGs 420 or 422, for example.
[0037] According to an example embodiment, the network topology or relay network 400 illustrated in FIG. 4 may be considered to include an access radio network 440 and a mesh radio network 450. The access radio network 440 may include the MN- RN and AG-MN wireless interface or wireless media between mobile nodes (MN) 403, 404, 405, etc. and one or more relay nodes (RNs). A mesh radio network 450 may include the RN-RN and RN-AG wireless interface or wireless media, such as the wireless media for RNs to communicate with other RNs, and RNs to communicate with AGs.
[0038] According to an example embodiment, the wireless media (which may include one or more channels) of access radio network 440 may, for example, be separate or orthogonal from the wireless media for mesh radio network 450. Orthogonality between the two networks may be accomplished by using different channels (e.g., different channels or frequencies, different time slots, and/or different frequency hopping sequences, etc), for instance. For example, if OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) is used, different sets of frequencies or subcarriers may be used for access radio network 440 and mesh radio network 450. Or, for example, if OFDMA (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access) is used, then different frequencies (or subcarriers) and/or time slots may be used between access radio network 440 and mesh radio network 450.
[0039] Orthogonality or independence between access radio network 440 and mesh radio network 450 may be accomplished, for example, by using different wireless technology for these two networks. For example, a cellular or GSM (Global System for Mobile Communication) wireless technology may be used for access radio network 440, while a WLAN or Wi-MAX (or other) wireless technology may be used for mesh radio network 450. For example, RN 407 may include two wireless transceivers, including a first cellular transceiver for communicating via the access radio network with MNs 403, 404, 405, etc., and a second WLAN or WiMAX transceiver for communicating with other RNs or AGs via mesh radio network 450. In another example embodiment, a same wireless technology may be used in both wireless networks 440 and 450, for example.
[0040] For example, by providing mesh radio network 450 that may have wireless media (or channels) orthogonal or separate from (or even using different wireless technology) access radio network 440, a legacy technology may be employed for mobile nodes (MNs) of network 440, while more advanced or newer technology may be used for mesh radio network 450 (e.g., for RNs and AGs). This may also allow protocols, rules, or other aspects of communication or technology for mesh radio network 450 to be independently changed and improved without creating incompatibility issues with existing handsets or mobile nodes (MNs), for example, although this is merely an example embodiment, and the disclosure is not limited thereto.
[0041 ] FIG. 5 is a diagram illustrating a tree structure for a wireless network according to an example embodiment. Network 500, which may be a mesh network or relay network, may include an access gateway (AG) 530 and one or more levels of relay nodes. A level may, for example, refer to a number of hops that a RN may be from the AG, or a number of hops the RNs are from a MN, for example. Or, for example, RNs may be grouped together based on a number of hops they are from the AG, or a number of hops from a MN, etc. Although this is just an example, and any numbering system or numbering convention may be used to identify levels or groups of RNs. In this example, a first level (of RNs) 520 may include, for example, RNs 522, 524 and 526, and a second level of RNs may include RNs 512, 514 and 516, although any number of RNs may be provided at each level. In addition, as shown, the network 500 may include any number of levels of RNs, such as a third level of RNs, a fourth level of RNs, etc.
[0042] According to an example embodiment, the one or more RNs may operate in a time division duplex (TDD) manner, where each RN may transmit during a time slot or phase, e.g., as part of TDD or OFDMA or other modulation scheme. Each RN may typically either transmit or receive, but does not typically transmit and receive at the same time. Also, in an example embodiment, it may be desirable for adjacent RNs to avoid transmitting across a shared wireless media at the same time, which may cause collisions, interference, etc.
[0043] Therefore, according to an example embodiment, a technique may be provided to transmit data using a multi-phase operation. For example, referring to FIG. 5, a first group 540 of RNs may transmit, and a second group 550 may receive, during a first phase (or time slot), while the second group 550 of RNs may transmit and the first group 540 may receive during a second phase or time slot. This is merely an example. In this manner, during each phase, one group of the RNs (or nodes) is transmitting, and the other group is receiving. During another phase or time slots, roles may be reversed, allowing the group that was receiving to now transmit, and the group that was transmitting to now receive. Also, this division of transmission into phases may include separate phases for uplink and downlink transmission, where uplink may generally refer to a transmission towards the AG, while downlink may refer to a transmission away from the AG (e.g., towards a MN).
[0044] In addition, according to an example embodiment, the groups of wireless nodes (or RNs) may include alternate levels (or alternate rows) of nodes or RNs, to allow efficient use of the wireless media. For instance, a first group of RNs 540 may include rows 1 and 3, while a second group of RNs may include rows 2 and 4, for example. Other levels may also be included. The first group of nodes 540 may transmit during a first phase, while a second group 550 receives during the first phase. Similarly, during a second phase, the second group 550 may transmit while the first group 540 may receive.
[0045] FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating a 4-phase operation for transmission for a wireless network according to an example embodiment. The phases may include phase 1, phase 2, phase 3 and phase 4, as examples. In this example illustrated in FIG. 6, a first group of wireless nodes may be simplified as first level 520 (but may include other levels, such as a third level), and a second group of wireless nodes may be simplified as a second level 510 (and may include other levels of nodes or RNs, such as a fourth level). Resources (e.g., time slots or other resources) may be allocated to the different levels of nodes for the different phases as shown, e.g., in order to more efficiently use the wireless media. The media may be reserved or allocated to nodes or groups of nodes, or resources may be obtained based on a contention-based channel access, for example. [0046] Referring to FIG. 6, at phase 1 610 (which may include a timeslot or group of timeslots), nodes of a first level 520 may receive frames (e.g., data frames, such as unicast, broadcast or multicast, and/or control frames, or other frames) in a downlink direction (from AG), while nodes of second level 510 may transmit frames (e.g., data frames, control frames, or other frames) in a downlink direction. Thus, during phase 1 610, one group of wireless nodes (e.g., first level 520) may receive frames in a downlink direction while another group (e.g., second level 510) may transmit frames in a downlink direction. A third level (not shown), if present, may be grouped with first level 520 and may receive in a downlink direction during phase 1 610. A fourth level (not shown), if present, may be grouped with second level 510 and may transmit in a downlink direction during phase 1 610.
[0047] During phase 2 620 (which may include a timeslot or group of timeslots), a first level 520 of nodes may transmit in the uplink direction (e.g., to AG 530), while a second level 510 of nodes may receive in the uplink direction (e.g., from a third level, not shown). The third level (like the first level) may, if present, transmit in the uplink direction, and the fourth level (like the second level), if present, may receive in the uplink direction, for example (not shown).
[0048] During a third phase 630, the first level 520 (and third level, not shown) of nodes may transmit in the downlink direction, while the second level 510 (and fourth level) of nodes may receive in the downlink direction. Thus, in this example, during phase 3, the first level 520 may transmit (e.g., during one or more timeslots) downlink to the second level 510; the second level 510 may receive in a downlink direction from the first level 520, etc.
[0049] During phase 4640, the first level 520 (and third level not shown) may receive in an uplink direction, and the second level 510 (and fourth level not shown) may transmit in an uplink direction.
[0050] According to an example embodiment, it may add additional delay for circuitry of a wireless node to switch from a receiving mode to transmitting mode, or to switch from a transmitting mode to a receive mode. Therefore, in an example embodiment, although not required, it may be beneficial (e.g., to reduce delay) to arrange the phases of operation to decrease a number of transmit-receive mode switchings. For example, although not required, the 4 phases may be arranged to perform two transmit phases, followed by two receive phases, followed by two transmit phases, etc., for each node. Thus, first level 520 of nodes may perform the following, according to phases 1-4: receive (DL), transmit (UL), transmit (DL), and receive (UL), and then repeat the 4 phases, where UL refers to uplink direction and DL refers to downlink direction. For the second level 510, the phases 1-4 may include, for example: transmit (DL), receive (UL), receive (DL), and transmit (UL), and then repeat. These are just some examples of how the order of phases may be arranged, although other orders may be used. Thus, in this example, the order for any node for the phases may be viewed as: T, T, R, R, T, T, R, R, T, T, ..., where T refers to transmit and R refers to receive. For example, the exact location of phase 1, phase 2, phase 3 and phase 4 in such a sequence may vary, based on where phase 1 is selected to begin.
[0051 ] Therefore, according to the example 4-phase operation, each node or RN may be provided an opportunity to transmit and receive both in the uplink and downlink directions. In an example embodiment, one or more of the nodes or RNs may include an ARQ (automatic repeat request), or other protocol, where the node may send an acknowledgement (ACK) to acknowledge successful receipt of data frames, and may send a negative acknowledgement (NACK) to indicate receipt of a corrupted frame or packet, thus indicating that the corrupted or incorrectly received frame or packet should be retransmitted. In addition to ACK and NACK frames, other control frames or control signals may be transmitted as well.
[0052] A number of applications may be sensitive to network delay. Also, the delay across a multi-hop network, such as a relay network or mesh network, may often be greater due to the higher number of hops. Therefore, it may be desirable to implement techniques where possible to decrease the delay for transmitting an ACK/NACK or for retransmitting a packet, e.g., to decrease network delay.
[0053] Referring to FIG. 6, in some cases, it may require 3 phases before a node may be able to transmit an ACK or NACK for a received frame. For example, in phase 4, first level 520 of nodes may receive in the uplink direction. However, first level 520 do not transmit downlink until the subsequent phase 3, which is 3 phases later. Also, first level 520 of nodes may receive in the downlink direction at phase 1, and may, at least in theory, be able to transmit an ACK/NACK in the uplink direction at phase 2, if the node has processed the received packet to determine if an ACK or NACK should be sent. In this case, there may not be sufficient time for first level node to receive and process the received data frame during phase 1 before transmitting an ACK/NACK or other control frame back to the AG 530 at phase 2. Rather, according to an example embodiment, a node may receive a frame during one phase, and may process that received frame during a next phase, e.g., while transmitting or receiving other frames. Therefore, in the example case where first level 520 may not have sufficient time to process the frame received in phase 1 before phase 2 begins, the first level 520 may wait 4 phases, until phase 2 again (of the next cycle of phases) before the first level node 520 will have an opportunity to transmit an ACK or NACK in the uplink direction to AG 530. Such a significant delay (e.g., 3 or 4 phases) before transmitting ACKs/NACKs or other control frames may be undesirable, at least for some applications.
[0054J FIG. 7 is a diagram illustrating an allocation of uplink and downlink transmissions according to an example embodiment. According to an example embodiment, a mesh network or relay network (or other wireless network) may use OFDMA technology as an underlying physical layer and resource allocations may be made, for example, in time (e.g., time slots) and frequency (subcarriers). Also, different frequency hopping sequences may be used, etc. Other technologies may be used to allocate resources. A granularity of time slots may be one OFDMA symbol, for example. Separate time slots may be used for DL and UL traffic. DL and UL traffic may include time slots for each RN and for the whole network.
[0055] Referring to FIG. 7, downlink (DL) allocation may often be greater or longer than uplink (UL) allocation. The DL transmission may, for example, begin with a preamble (pa). When a node transmits, it may also process a packet or frame it previously received, for example. When a node is receiving, the node may also be preprocessing a frame or packet to be transmitted during a next phase. Example UL and DL allocations are shown in FIG. 7, e.g., for level 1 520 for phases 1-4. Phase 1 may include receiving frames in the DL direction. Phase 2 may include transmitting (or an opportunity to transmit) in the UL direction. Phase 3 may include transmitting (or an opportunity to transmit) in the DL direction. And, phase 4 for level 1 520 may include receiving in the UL direction, for example.
[0056] FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrating a 4-phase operation for transmission for a wireless network according to another example embodiment. According to an example embodiment, network delay (e.g., delays in sending ACKs/NACKs) may be decreased in the example 4-phase operation of FIG. 8, e.g., as compared to the 4-ρhase operation shown in FIG. 6.
[0057] According to an example embodiment, a node or RN may transmit frames (e.g., data frames and/or control frames) in a first direction and may transmit control frames or control messages (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in a second direction during a first phase. Similarly, the node or RN may transmit frames (e.g., data frames and/or control frames) in the second direction and may transmit control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in the first direction during a second or other phase. For example, although not required, a dedicated control channel (e.g., separate subcarrier and/or time slot) may be allocated for the control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs). Or, for example, the node may transmit a data frame to a first node while transmitting an ACK/NACK (or other control frame) to a second node during a first phase. The first and second nodes may, for example, be located in different directions (e.g., a first node is upstream and the second node is downstream).
[0058] In an alternative embodiment, a RN or node may transmit a data frame to a first node and an ACK/NACK (or other control frame) to a second node during a particular phase (which may include one or more time slots), where the first and second nodes may be located in the same direction (e.g., both first and second nodes may be both upstream or both downstream).
[0059] In this manner, by allowing a node to transmit data or other frames, e.g., in a first direction and being permitted to transmit control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs), e.g., in a second direction during a same phase (e.g., timeslot or group of timeslots that are part of the phase), a faster acknowledgement or negative acknowledgement may be provided, which may decrease network delays.
[0060] The first and second directions may refer to uplink or downlink directions, or downlink and uplink directions. Transmitting in a particular direction (either UL or DL) does not necessarily mean that a directional antenna is used or a directional transmission is performed. Any kind of antenna may be used, such as omnidirectional antennas, directional antennas, or other antennas, etc. Rather, transmitting in an UL or DL direction may, for example, indicate that a frame is being transmitted or directed to a node that is located in a direction that may be UL(or upstream) or DL (or downstream) direction, for example. For example, transmitting in a DL direction may include transmitting (e.g., using a directional, omnidirectional or other antenna) a data frame to a mobile node (which is located downstream from the transmitting node). Similarly, transmitting in an UL direction may include transmitting a frame to an AG (which is located upstream from the transitting node), although the frame may pass through one or more intermediate KNs before reaching the AG.
[0061] Referring to FIG. 8, the solid lines may indicate transmission (or permission to transmit) of frames (e.g., data frames, control frames, and/or other frames), while dashed lines may indicate transmission (or permission to transmit) control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs or other control signals).
[0062] At phase 1 810, second level 510 of nodes may transmit frames (e.g., data and/or control frames) in a DL direction indicated by the solid lines, while transmitting (or being permitted to transmit) control signals (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in an UL direction indicated by the dashed line. Phase 1 (and the other phases) may include one or more channels or resources, such as multiple frequencies (subcarriers) and/or time slots, for example. For example, a dedicated resource or channel (e.g., subcarrier and/or time slot) may be provided for the transmission of control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) for transmission of ACKs/NACKs. For example, second level nodes 510 may transmit a data frame in a DL direction (e.g, to a MN) using a first channel (e.g., a subcarrier and/or timeslot) while transmitting ACKs/NACK to AG (UL), during phase 1. For instance, different time slots may be used for data frames (solid lines) and ACKs/NACKs (dashed lines), or different subcarriers for the data and control frames may be used on the same time slot for phase 1. Thus, a dedicated control channel may be employed to transmit ACKs/NACKs, for example. AG 530 may also transmit DL during phase 1.
[0063] During phase 2 820 (e.g., which may include one or more time slots), second level 510 of nodes may receive data or other frames in an UL direction (e.g., from third level) and may receive control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in a DL direction from the first level 520. Also during phase 2, the first level 520 of relay nodes may transmit data or other frames in an UL direction and may transmit control frames in a DL direction,
[0064] During phase 3 830 (which may include one or more time slots), first level 520 may transmit data or other frames in a DL direction and may transmit control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in an UL direction. Second level 510 nodes may receive data or other frames in a DL direction, and may also receive control frames in an UL direction from a third level (not shown) if present.
[0065] In phase 4 840, first level 520 may transmit data or other frames in an UL direction, and may transmit control frames (e.g., ACKs/NACKs) in a DL direction.
[0066] According to an example embodiment, the 4-phase operation illustrated in FIG. 8 may allow an efficient use of resources for a network, such as a relay network or mesh network, for example. A first level ELN 520 may receive in a DL direction a data frame in phase 1 (from AG), may process or decode the received frame during phase 2 while transmitting other data or frames, and may forward the received data frame (that was received in phase 1), and then may forward the processed frame to second level 510 during phase 3. This may provide sufficient time for a node to process a received frame before forwarding the frame, but not provide too much delay between receipt and forwarding of the frame that would introduce unnecessary delay. This is merely an example embodiment, and other embodiments or examples may be used.
[0067] In addition, the 4-phase operation illustrated in FIG. 8 may allow a faster ARQ mechanism, e.g., as compared to the system illustrated in FIG. 6. For example, first level 520 may receive data frames in a DL direction in phase 1 810, and may transmit ACKs/NACKs in an UL direction during either phase 2 820 or phase 3 830. As noted, in some cases there may not be sufficient time for the node to receive and process a frame during phase 1, and then transmit an ACK NACK during phase 2 820. Therefore, allowing first lev&l node 520 to transmit an ACK or NACK, e.g., on a dedicated control channel, in an UL direction during phase 3 830 may allow transmission of ACKs/NACKs up to 2 or 3 phases earlier, which may decrease network delay. Similarly, second level 510 may receive a data frame in a DL direction in phase 3, and may transmit an ACK/NACK in an UL direction in phase 3, e.g., on a dedicated control channel.
[0068] In addition, as shown in FIG. 8, the network may include a first group of nodes (e.g., second level 510) that may transmit data or other frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase, and transmit data frames in a second direction and control frames in a first direction during a fourth phase (e.g., second level 510 may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in a UL direction during phase 1, and may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 4) . The network may also include a second group of nodes (e.g., first level 520) that may transmit data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase, and transmit data frames in the first direction and control frames in the second direction during a third phase (e.g., first level 520 may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 2, and may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in an UL direction during phase 3).
[0069] According to an example embodiment, resources (e.g., different frequencies, time slots, hopping sequences, and the like) maybe reserved for one or more . control channels to allow fast ACKs/NACKs to be transmitted. According to an example embodiment, only certain high priority applications may be permitted to use the fast control channels, such as Voice over IP (VoIP) applications, interactive games or other high priority applications that may be sensitive to network delay. For example, traffic having only certain high priority classes or Access Categories (ACs) may be permitted to use the dedicated control channel for ACKs/NACKs. In another example embodiment, the dedicated control channel(s) may be used only for NACKs, in order to decrease load or traffic through the high priority channels, for example.
[0070] FIG. 9 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node (e.g., relay node) according to an example embodiment. At 910, a frame (e.g., data frame) may be transmitted in a downlink direction and a control frame may be transmitted in an uplink direction during a first phase. At 920, a frame (e.g., data frame) may be transmitted in an uplink direction and a control frame may be transmitted in a downlink direction during a second phase.
[0071 ] FIG. 10 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node (e.g., a relay node) according to an example embodiment. At 1010, a data frame may be transmitted in a downlink direction and a control frame may be transmitted in an uplink direction during a first phase. At 1020, a frame may be received in an uplink direction during a second phase. Of course, control frames may be received in a downlink direction as well at 1020. At 1030, a frame may be received in a downlink direction during a third phase. In an example embodiment, control frames may also be received via an uplink direction during the third phase. At 1040, a data frame may be transmitted in an uplink direction and a control frame may be transmitted in a downlink direction during a fourth phase.
[0072] FIG. 11 is a flow chart illustrating operation of a node (e.g., a relay node) according to an example embodiment.
[00731 At 1110, a first group of nodes (e.g., second level 510) may transmit data or other frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase, and transmit data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase (e.g., second level 510 may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in a UL direction during phase 1, and may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 4) .
[0074] At 1120, a second group of nodes (e.g., first level 520) that may transmit data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase, and transmit data frames in the first direction and control frames in the second direction during a third phase (e.g., first level 520 may transmit data frames in an UL direction and control frames in a DL direction during phase 2, and may transmit data frames in a DL direction and control frames in an UL direction during phase 3).
[0075] FIG. 12 is a block diagram illustrating an apparatus 1200 that may be provided in a wireless node according to an example embodiment. The wireless node (e.g. station or AP) may include, for example, a wireless transceiver 1202 to transmit and receive signals, a controller 1204 to control operation of the station and execute instructions or software, and a memory 1206 to store data and/or instructions.
[0076] Controller 1204 may be programmable and capable of executing software or other instructions stored in memory or on other computer media to perform the various tasks and functions described above, such as one or more the tasks or methods described above. [0077] In addition, a storage medium may be provided that includes stored instructions, when executed by a controller or processor that may result in the controller 1204, or other controller or processor, performing one or more of the functions or tasks described above.
[0078] Implementations of the various techniques described herein may be implemented in digital electronic circuitry, or in computer hardware, firmware, software, or in combinations of them. Implementations may implemented as a computer program product, i.e., a computer program tangibly embodied in an information carrier, e.g., in a machine-readable storage device or in a propagated signal, for execution by, or to control the operation of, data processing apparatus, e.g., a programmable processor, a computer, or multiple computers. A computer program, such as the computer program(s) described above, can be written in any form of programming language, including compiled or interpreted languages, and can be deployed in any form, including as a stand-alone program or as a module, component, subroutine, or other unit suitable for use in a computing environment. A computer program can be deployed to be executed on one computer or on multiple computers at one site or distributed across multiple sites and interconnected by a communication network.
[0079] Method steps may be performed by one or more programmable processors executing a computer program to perform functions by operating on input data and generating output. Method steps also may be performed by, and an apparatus may be implemented as, special purpose logic circuitry, e.g., an FPGA (field programmable gate array) or an ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit).
[0080] While certain features of the described implementations have been illustrated as described herein, many modifications, substitutions, changes and equivalents will now occur to those skilled in the art

Claims

1. A method of transmitting data comprising: transmitting a data frame to a fiist node (e.g., 530, FIG. 8) and a control frame to a second node (e.g., 510) during a first phase (e.g., Phase 2 820) of a multi-phase operation (e.g., FIG. 8); wherein the control frame is transmitted to the second node using a dedicated control channel.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the data frame and the control frame are transmitted on different channels during the first phase.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the different channels are provided based on different subcarriers and/or different time slots.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the transmitting comprises transmitting a data frame to a first node via a first channel and a control frame to a second node via a second channel during a first phase of a multi-phase operation, the control frame including an acknowledgement (ACK) or negative acknowledgement (NACK).
5. The method of claim 1 wherein the transmitting comprises transmitting a data frame in a downlink direction and a control frame in an uplink direction during a first phase of a multi-phase operation.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the transmitting comprises transmitting a data frame in an uplink direction via a first channel and a control frame in a downlink direction via a second channel during a first phase of a multi-phase operation.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the transmitting comprises transmitting a data frame in a first direction via a first subcarrier during a first timeslot and an ACK/NAK frame in a second direction via a second subcarrier during the first timeslot.
8. The method of claim 1 wherein the transmitting comprises transmitting a data frame to a first node via a first subcarrier during a first time slot and transmitting a control frame to a second node during via a second subcarrier during the first time slot, the first time slot being provided within a first phase of a 4-phase operation.
9. A method of transmitting data using a multi-phase operation comprising: transmitting (910) frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase; and transmitting (920) frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein: the transmitting frames in a downlink direction comprises transmitting data frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase; and the transmitting frames in an uplink direction comprises transmitting data frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
11. The method of claim 9 wherein the control frames comprise an acknowledgement (ACK) and/or negative ACK (NACK).
12. The method of claim 9 wherein: the transmitting frames in a downlink direction comprises transmitting data frames in a downlink direction and an acknowledgement (ACK) and/or negative ACK (NACK) in an uplink direction during a first phase; and the transmitting frames in an uplink direction comprises transmitting data frames in an uplink direction and an acknowledgements (ACK) and/or negative ACK (NACK) in a downlink direction during a second phase, wherein each phase includes one or more time slots.
13. A method of transmitting and receiving data using a multi-phase operation comprising: transmitting (1010) at least data frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase (e.g., phase 3, 830); receiving (1020) frames in an uplink direction during a second phase (e.g., phase 4, 840); receiving (1030) frames in a downlink direction during a third phase (e.g., phase 1, 810); and transmitting (1040) at least data frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a fourth phase (phase 2, 820).
14. The method of claim 13 wherein a phase comprises a time slot.
15. The method of claim 13 and further comprising receiving an uplink/downlink split message indicating a number or ratio of the length of or amount of subframes of uplink and downlink phases.
16. The method of claim 13 wherein the method comprises: performing the following by a first group of wireless nodes in a relay network: transmitting at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase; and transmitting at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase; and performing the following by a second group of wireless nodes in a relay network: transmitting at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a second phase; and transmitting at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a third phase.
17. The method of claim 13 wherein the first direction comprises a downlink direction and the second direction comprises an uplink direction.
18. The method of claim 13 wherein the second direction comprises a downlink direction and the first direction comprises an uplink direction.
19. An apparatus for wireless communication, the apparatus configured to: transmit frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase; and transmit frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
20. The apparatus of claim 19 wherein the apparatus comprises a relay node, the relay node further comprising a controller, a memory and a wireless transceiver.
21. The apparatus of claim 19 wherein the apparatus comprises a controller (1204); a memory (1206) coupled to the controller; and a wireless transceiver (1202) coupled to the controller; the apparatus configured to: transmit (1010) at least data frames in a first direction and control frames in a second direction during a first phase; receive (1020) frames in the second direction during a second phase; receive (1030) frames in the first direction during a third phase; and transmit (1040) at least data frames in the second direction and control frames in the first direction during a fourth phase.
22. The apparatus of claim 19, wherein the apparatus comprises a first wireless transceiver for transmitting on subcarriers or frequencies in the downlink direction, and a second wireless transceiver for transmitting on subcarriers or frequencies in the uplink direction.
23. The apparatus of claim 19 wherein the first direction comprises a downlink direction and the second direction comprises an uplink direction.
24. The apparatus of claim 19 wherein the second direction comprises a downlink direction and the first direction comprises an uplink direction.
25. A relay node (1200) configured to operate in an access radio network for wireless media coupling one or more mobile nodes and the relay node, the relay node also configured to operate in a mesh radio network for wireless media coupling the relay node to an access node or one or more other relay nodes, the wireless media for the access radio network being substantially orthogonal to the wireless media for the mesh radio network, the relay node further configured to: transmit (910) frames in a downlink direction and control frames in an uplink direction during a first phase; and transmit (920) frames in an uplink direction and control frames in a downlink direction during a second phase.
PCT/IB2007/003380 2006-11-07 2007-11-06 Control signaling techniques for wireless networks WO2008056235A2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP07825606.2A EP2084829A4 (en) 2006-11-07 2007-11-06 Control signaling techniques for wireless networks

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US86470406P 2006-11-07 2006-11-07
US60/864,704 2006-11-07
US11/935,268 2007-11-05
US11/935,268 US7983302B2 (en) 2006-11-07 2007-11-05 Control signaling techniques for wireless networks

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2008056235A2 true WO2008056235A2 (en) 2008-05-15
WO2008056235A3 WO2008056235A3 (en) 2008-07-10

Family

ID=39364888

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/IB2007/003380 WO2008056235A2 (en) 2006-11-07 2007-11-06 Control signaling techniques for wireless networks

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (2) US7983302B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2084829A4 (en)
WO (1) WO2008056235A2 (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2010039739A2 (en) * 2008-09-30 2010-04-08 Qualcomm Incorporated Techniques for supporting relay operation in wireless communication systems
US8503354B2 (en) 2006-11-07 2013-08-06 Nokia Corporation Control signaling techniques for wireless networks
EP2109246A3 (en) * 2008-04-07 2014-04-23 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Methods and apparatus to improve communication in a relay channel
US9203564B2 (en) 2008-10-20 2015-12-01 Qualcomm Incorporated Data transmission via a relay station in a wireless communication system

Families Citing this family (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8351434B1 (en) 2009-02-06 2013-01-08 Olympus Corporation Methods and systems for data communication over wireless communication channels
BR112012003636A2 (en) * 2009-08-17 2016-03-22 Alcetel Lucent Method and apparatus for controlling downlink data transmission in a multi-hop relay communication system
US8634434B2 (en) * 2009-11-06 2014-01-21 Quantenna Communications, Inc. Message routing in wireless mesh networks
KR101719165B1 (en) * 2010-10-27 2017-03-23 삼성전자주식회사 METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR A TRANSMISSION/RECEPTION OF A WLAN NETWORK SHARING DATA IN A Wi-Fi P2P GROUP
US9474100B2 (en) * 2011-10-28 2016-10-18 P2 Mobile Technologies Limited Relaying devices for wireless mesh network
CN104219021A (en) * 2013-05-31 2014-12-17 中兴通讯股份有限公司 Downlink data transmission method, apparatus, and system for virtual multi-antenna system
WO2019001695A1 (en) * 2017-06-28 2019-01-03 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Systems and methods for wireless transmission of bi-directional traffic
WO2019236476A1 (en) * 2018-06-04 2019-12-12 SparkMeter, Inc. Wireless mesh data network with increased transmission capacity

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6563813B1 (en) 1998-12-09 2003-05-13 Solbyung Coveley Wireless transport protocol

Family Cites Families (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS61188790A (en) 1985-02-16 1986-08-22 Hitachi Maxell Ltd Disk cartridge
JPS6488790A (en) 1987-09-30 1989-04-03 Toshiba Corp Straight line drawing system
WO1999063686A1 (en) * 1998-05-29 1999-12-09 Nokia Networks Oy A method for data transmission in a cellular telecommunication system
US6516184B1 (en) * 1999-08-31 2003-02-04 Skyworks Solutions, Inc. Multi-band transceiver having multi-slot capability
SG148029A1 (en) * 1999-11-04 2008-12-31 Ntt Docomo Inc Method, base station and mobile station for timeslot selection and timeslot assignment
US7519011B2 (en) * 2000-09-29 2009-04-14 Intel Corporation Frame structure for radio communications system
JP3471785B1 (en) * 2002-07-31 2003-12-02 松下電器産業株式会社 Communication device and data retransmission control method
US7420984B2 (en) * 2003-05-09 2008-09-02 Arraycomm Llc Method and apparatus for multi-phase wireless handshaking
DE102004009266B4 (en) 2004-02-26 2005-12-29 Siemens Ag Method for transmitting user data in a multihop system and network node device therefor
CA2584962C (en) 2004-10-20 2013-09-24 T-Mobile International Ag & Co. Kg Cellular wide-area radio communications system with relay-enhanced cells
SE0403218D0 (en) * 2004-12-30 2004-12-30 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Method and apparatus related to communication
EP1681792B1 (en) * 2005-01-17 2013-03-13 Nokia Siemens Networks GmbH & Co. KG Secure data transmission in a multi-hop system
KR100899751B1 (en) 2005-03-09 2009-05-27 삼성전자주식회사 System and method for relaying signal in a communication system
US8644130B2 (en) * 2005-03-18 2014-02-04 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. System and method for subcarrier allocation in a wireless multihop relay network
US8031604B2 (en) * 2006-10-25 2011-10-04 Sydir Jaroslaw J Algorithm for grouping stations for transmission in a multi-phase frame structure to support multi-hop wireless broadband access communications
US7983302B2 (en) 2006-11-07 2011-07-19 Nokia Corporation Control signaling techniques for wireless networks

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6563813B1 (en) 1998-12-09 2003-05-13 Solbyung Coveley Wireless transport protocol

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See also references of EP2084829A4

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8503354B2 (en) 2006-11-07 2013-08-06 Nokia Corporation Control signaling techniques for wireless networks
EP2109246A3 (en) * 2008-04-07 2014-04-23 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Methods and apparatus to improve communication in a relay channel
WO2010039739A2 (en) * 2008-09-30 2010-04-08 Qualcomm Incorporated Techniques for supporting relay operation in wireless communication systems
WO2010039739A3 (en) * 2008-09-30 2010-07-08 Qualcomm Incorporated Techniques for supporting relay operation in wireless communication systems
US8971241B2 (en) 2008-09-30 2015-03-03 Qualcolmm Incorporated Techniques for supporting relay operation in wireless communication systems
US9294219B2 (en) 2008-09-30 2016-03-22 Qualcomm Incorporated Techniques for supporting relay operation in wireless communication systems
US9203564B2 (en) 2008-10-20 2015-12-01 Qualcomm Incorporated Data transmission via a relay station in a wireless communication system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20090067362A1 (en) 2009-03-12
US20110243070A1 (en) 2011-10-06
US7983302B2 (en) 2011-07-19
EP2084829A2 (en) 2009-08-05
US8503354B2 (en) 2013-08-06
WO2008056235A3 (en) 2008-07-10
EP2084829A4 (en) 2013-05-01

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7983302B2 (en) Control signaling techniques for wireless networks
AU2021201730B2 (en) Hybrid automatic repeat request (harq) payload mapping for short physical uplink control channel (pucch) on a shared communication medium
EP3378185B1 (en) Signaling of short pucch signals
US8175024B2 (en) Bandwidth allocation for relay networks
US20080137581A1 (en) Data forwarding techniques for wireless relay networks
US9100149B2 (en) Resource allocation method for backhaul link and access link in a wireless communication system including relay
US9066365B2 (en) Relay station data transmission method
KR101081704B1 (en) Method and apparatus for providing and obtaining broadcast/multicast service feedback
US7952988B2 (en) Apparatus and method of controlling action change gap in multi-hop relay cellular network
JP5465352B2 (en) Frame configuration method and apparatus in wireless communication system including relay station
US8797896B2 (en) System and method for assigning backhaul resources
CN101925118B (en) Method, device and system for avoiding conflicts of interface transmission
WO2020034570A1 (en) Remote interference mitigation resource configuration
CN110612709B (en) Method for supporting multicast/multi-user transmission using listen-before-talk and related network node
US11411635B2 (en) Spatial reuse in WLAN multi-AP network
JP2022003770A (en) Method and device for instructing time delay in wireless communication system
CN116762390A (en) Side-uplink collision indication
EP2692071B1 (en) Cooperative transmission
WO2010070385A1 (en) Relay node sub-frame allocation
WO2024031545A1 (en) Method and system for beam indication in wireless network
US11533671B1 (en) Techniques for dynamic distance control for contention-based forwarding
Cheng et al. Dynamic pre-allocation HARQ (DP-HARQ) in IEEE 802.16 j mobile multihop relay (MMR)
CN112398586A (en) Data transmission method and device, sending end equipment and receiving end equipment

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: 07825606

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A2

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2007825606

Country of ref document: EP