Power-Level-Design-Aware Scalable Framework for Throughput Analysis of GF-NOMA in mMTC

This article proposes a scalable framework to analyse the throughput of the grant-free power-domain nonorthogonal multiple access (GF-NOMA) and presents the achievable performance in the optimized offered load at each power level (called per-level offered load) by using our framework. Our analytical...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE internet of things journal 2024-09, Vol.11 (17), p.28227-28243
Hauptverfasser: Hirai, Takeshi, Oda, Rei, Wakamiya, Naoki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article proposes a scalable framework to analyse the throughput of the grant-free power-domain nonorthogonal multiple access (GF-NOMA) and presents the achievable performance in the optimized offered load at each power level (called per-level offered load) by using our framework. Our analytical model reflects packet errors caused by power collisions, characterized by GF-NOMA, based on the power level design guaranteeing the required signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR). This key idea enables analyzing the throughput of a large-scale GF-NOMA system more accurately than the existing analytical models. Also, this key idea enables optimizing the per-level offered load rather than an uniform one in typical optimization problems related to the throughput: the throughput maximization or energy minimization problem with a throughput condition. Our analytical results highlight some key insights into designing future access control methods in GF-NOMA. First, our analytical model achieves an approximation error of only 0.4% for the exact throughput obtained by the exhaustive search at the five power levels. The existing analytical model provides an approximation error of 25%. Next, our proposed framework highlights that the optimal per-level offered load restrictively improves the throughput above the optimally uniform per-level offered load. Finally, our proposed framework discovers a 27% more energy-efficient per-level offered load than the existing framework at the five power levels while providing higher throughput than the optimally uniform per-level offered load.
ISSN:2327-4662
2327-4662
DOI:10.1109/JIOT.2024.3400996