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To meet the global challenge of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and the explosion demand of wireless data traffic, green architecture design is becoming a critical issue for mobile network operators. Heterogeneous deployments of different cell types have been used to fulfill the challenges mentioned above. In this respect, a critical concern for operators is how to deploy small cells in a green manner such that the global network is cost-effective as well as energy-efficient. In this paper, we characterize the energy efficiency (EE) and deployment efficiency (DE) for heterogenous wireless networks, taking into account realistic network power consumption model and dynamic network configuration. We give first order closed form analysis to address this issue and show that a proper density of small cells is required to obtain the maximum achievable EE/DE. Our study also provides useful insights for the modeling and deployment of future green wireless networks.
He et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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