Ultra-reliable low-latency industrial wireless communications: optimization and implementation
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Doctor of PhilosophyAuthor/s
Zhang, LitianyiAbstract
Ultra-reliable and low-latency communications (URLLC) are crucial for mission-critical services in fifth-generation (5G) mobile networks. Due to limited time and frequency resources in URLLC, decoding packet error probability (PEP) is unavoidable, which makes meeting the reliability ...
See moreUltra-reliable and low-latency communications (URLLC) are crucial for mission-critical services in fifth-generation (5G) mobile networks. Due to limited time and frequency resources in URLLC, decoding packet error probability (PEP) is unavoidable, which makes meeting the reliability constraint extremely challenging. A key challenge is that current wireless systems use pilot symbols for channel estimation, sharing channel resources with data symbols. In this thesis, I first design unsupervised learning algorithms to estimate a resource allocation policy for independent and identically distributed fading channels, including a model-based algorithm for measurable PEP and a model-free method for discrete PEP observations. Results demonstrate that my methods can significantly enhance resource utilization efficiency, even with a lower signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio. Furthermore, I focus on temporally correlated channel realizations and propose deep reinforcement learning algorithms to determine the resource allocation policy that can maximize long-term resource utilization efficiency. I formulate the optimization problem as a partial observation Markov decision process and develop a cascaded-action Twin Delayed Deep Deterministic policy (CA-TD3) to address it. I introduce a primal CA-TD3 algorithm and compare it with a primal-dual method. The results indicate that the primal CA-TD3 converges more efficiently than the primal-dual method. Lastly, I aspire to design a hardware platform to implement wireless time-sensitive networking, which is one of the most vital scenarios of URLLC. I select a commercial 802.11-based platform and utilize a time division multiple access (TDMA) mechanism to schedule transmissions through novel real-time quality of service and fine-grained aggregation schemes. Experimental results demonstrate the superiority of my proposed protocol compared to existing TDMA-based 802.11 and legacy 802.11 systems.
See less
See moreUltra-reliable and low-latency communications (URLLC) are crucial for mission-critical services in fifth-generation (5G) mobile networks. Due to limited time and frequency resources in URLLC, decoding packet error probability (PEP) is unavoidable, which makes meeting the reliability constraint extremely challenging. A key challenge is that current wireless systems use pilot symbols for channel estimation, sharing channel resources with data symbols. In this thesis, I first design unsupervised learning algorithms to estimate a resource allocation policy for independent and identically distributed fading channels, including a model-based algorithm for measurable PEP and a model-free method for discrete PEP observations. Results demonstrate that my methods can significantly enhance resource utilization efficiency, even with a lower signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio. Furthermore, I focus on temporally correlated channel realizations and propose deep reinforcement learning algorithms to determine the resource allocation policy that can maximize long-term resource utilization efficiency. I formulate the optimization problem as a partial observation Markov decision process and develop a cascaded-action Twin Delayed Deep Deterministic policy (CA-TD3) to address it. I introduce a primal CA-TD3 algorithm and compare it with a primal-dual method. The results indicate that the primal CA-TD3 converges more efficiently than the primal-dual method. Lastly, I aspire to design a hardware platform to implement wireless time-sensitive networking, which is one of the most vital scenarios of URLLC. I select a commercial 802.11-based platform and utilize a time division multiple access (TDMA) mechanism to schedule transmissions through novel real-time quality of service and fine-grained aggregation schemes. Experimental results demonstrate the superiority of my proposed protocol compared to existing TDMA-based 802.11 and legacy 802.11 systems.
See less
Date
2023Rights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
Faculty of Engineering, School of Electrical and Information EngineeringAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare