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dc.creatorBudzisz, L.en
dc.creatorGanji, F.en
dc.creatorRizzo, G.en
dc.creatorAjmone Marsan, M.en
dc.creatorMeo, M.en
dc.creatorZhang, Y.en
dc.creatorKoutitas, G.en
dc.creatorTassiulas, L.en
dc.creatorLambert, S.en
dc.creatorLannoo, B.en
dc.creatorPickavet, M.en
dc.creatorConte, A.en
dc.creatorHaratcherev, I.en
dc.creatorWolisz, A.en
dc.date.accessioned2015-11-23T10:24:17Z
dc.date.available2015-11-23T10:24:17Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.identifier10.1109/COMST.2014.2329505
dc.identifier.issn1553877X
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11615/26487
dc.description.abstractTraditionally, energy efficiency aspects have been included in the wireless access network design space only in the context of power control aimed at interference mitigation and for the increase of the terminal battery lifetime. Energy consumption of network components has also, for a long time, not been considered an issue, neither in equipment design nor in network planning and management. However, in recent years, with the user demand increasing at nearly exponential pace and margins rapidly shrinking, concerns about energy efficiency have been raised, with the objective of reducing network operational costs (not to mention the environmental issues). Installing more energy-efficient hardware does not seem to fully solve the problem, since wireless access networks are almost invariably (over)provisioned with respect to the peak user demand. This means that efficient resource management schemes, which are capable of controlling how much of the network infrastructure is actually needed and which parts can be temporarily powered off to save energy, can be extremely effective and provide quite large cost reductions. Considering that most of the energy in wireless access networks is consumed in the radio part, dynamic provisioning of wireless access network resources is crucial to achieving energy-efficient operation. The consensus on this approach in the research community has been wide in the last few years, and a large number of solutions have been proposed. In this paper, we survey the most important proposals, considering the two most common wireless access technologies, namely, cellular and WLAN. The main features of the proposed solutions are analyzed and compared, with an outlook on their applicability in typical network scenarios that also include cooperation between both access technologies. Moreover, we provide an overview of the practical implementation aspects that must be addressed to achieve truly energy-efficient wireless access networks, including current standardization work, and trends in the development of energy-efficient hardware. © 2014 IEEE.en
dc.sourceIEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorialsen
dc.source.urihttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84913536205&partnerID=40&md5=14372d791d934119e8e73bf5e7452ed8
dc.subjectcellular networksen
dc.subjectfemtocellsen
dc.subjectGreen networkingen
dc.subjecton/off switchingen
dc.subjectsleep modesen
dc.subjectWLANen
dc.subjectCost reductionen
dc.subjectEnergy utilizationen
dc.subjectHardwareen
dc.subjectInterference suppressionen
dc.subjectSurveysen
dc.subjectWireless networksen
dc.subjectCellular networken
dc.subjectFemto-cellsen
dc.subjectGreen networkingsen
dc.subjectSLEEP modeen
dc.subjectEnergy efficiencyen
dc.titleDynamic resource provisioning for energy efficiency in wireless access networks: A survey and an outlooken
dc.typejournalArticleen


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