Femtocell technology addresses the severe problems of poor network capacity and indoor coverage. Meanwhile, the emergence of high-capacity air interfaces and dense deployment of small cells result in increasingly high backhaul cost in cellular wireless networks. Purchasing on leased lines can guarantee the service provision during busy hours, however, purchased capacity goes to waste in off-peak time. Hybrid mode is the most promising one among all femtocell access modes which allows macro users to associate with adjacent femtocells with idle bandwidth resources. Femto holder (FH) is egoistic and unwilling to share bandwidth with transferred users from macrocells without any compensation, thus the successful implementation of hybrid access becomes a challenging problem. In this paper, we present an economic refunding framework to motivate hybrid access in femtocells. Macro users can opportunistically associate with adjacent femtocells with excess backhaul capacity. FH can receive certain refunding from wireless service provider (WSP) in exchange for traffic offloading. FH employs congestion pricing policy so as to control the cell load in the femtocell. Within this framework, we design a general utility maximization problem for user association that enables macro users to associate with femtocells based on traffic status, cell load, and access price. Dual decomposition is used to obtain an approximate solution. The impact of congestion pricing on the aggregate throughput and load balancing is also analyzed. Extensive simulations show the proposed scheme achieves a remarkable throughput gain compared with that with no compensation and compensation with usage-based pricing policy. Load balancing is substantially improved as well.
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