On the Beamformed Broadcasting for Millimeter Wave Cell Discovery: Performance Analysis and Design Insight
The availability of abundant spectrum makes millimeter wave (mm-wave) a prominent candidate technology for the next generation of cellular networks. Highly directional transmission is essential for the exploitation of mm-wave bands to compensate for high propagation loss. The directional transmissio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE transactions on wireless communications 2018-11, Vol.17 (11), p.7620-7634 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The availability of abundant spectrum makes millimeter wave (mm-wave) a prominent candidate technology for the next generation of cellular networks. Highly directional transmission is essential for the exploitation of mm-wave bands to compensate for high propagation loss. The directional transmission, nevertheless, necessitates a specific design for mm-wave initial cell discovery, as conventional omni-directional broadcasting may fail in delivering cell discovery information. To address this issue, this paper provides an analytical framework for mm-wave beamformed cell discovery based on an information-theoretic approach. Design options are compared considering four fundamental and representative broadcasting schemes to evaluate discovery latency and overhead. The schemes are then simulated under realistic system parameters. Analytical and simulation results reveal four key findings: 1) analog/hybrid beamforming performs as well as digital beamforming in terms of cell discovery latency; 2) single-beam exhaustive scan optimizes the latency and, however, leads to the overhead penalty; 3) multi-beam simultaneous scan can significantly reduce the overhead and provide the flexibility to achieve tradeoff between the latency and the overhead; and 4) the latency and the overhead are relatively insensitive to extreme low block error rates. |
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ISSN: | 1536-1276 1558-2248 |
DOI: | 10.1109/TWC.2018.2868653 |