276 research outputs found
Coexistence of orthogonal and nonorthogonal multicarrier signals in beyond 5G scenarios
Optimum operation of future mobile communication systems requires more flexible signalling mechanisms for radio access. For flexible heterogeneous signalling implementation, this work discusses coexistence scenarios of orthogonal and nonorthogonal multicarrier signals, specifically considering orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) and spectrally efficient FDM (SEFDM) signals. Three main scenarios of the coexisting signalling are addressed under 5G new radio (5G NR) numerology with varying subcarrier spacing. Using numerical simulations, this work reports performance results of systems operating under the studied coexistence scenarios assuming uncoded and coded signals. Results reveal that systems employing SEFDM and OFDM result in some BER degradation when uncoded signals are used and also show that when applying low-density parity-check (LDPC) to the transmitted signals, the coexistence effects are mitigated and the block error rate (BLER) for both orthogonal and non-orthogonal signals suffers only slight degradation
Time-Frequency Warped Waveforms
The forthcoming communication systems are advancing towards improved
flexibility in various aspects. Improved flexibility is crucial to cater
diverse service requirements. This letter proposes a novel waveform design
scheme that exploits axis warping to enable peaceful coexistence of different
pulse shapes. A warping transform manipulates the lattice samples non-uniformly
and provides flexibility to handle the time-frequency occupancy of a signal.
The proposed approach enables the utilization of flexible pulse shapes in a
quasi-orthogonal manner and increases the spectral efficiency. In addition, the
rectangular resource block structure, which assists an efficient resource
allocation, is preserved with the warped waveform design as well.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures; accepted version (The URL for the final version:
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=8540914&isnumber=8605392
Waveform Design for 5G and Beyond
5G is envisioned to improve major key performance indicators (KPIs), such as
peak data rate, spectral efficiency, power consumption, complexity, connection
density, latency, and mobility. This chapter aims to provide a complete picture
of the ongoing 5G waveform discussions and overviews the major candidates. It
provides a brief description of the waveform and reveals the 5G use cases and
waveform design requirements. The chapter presents the main features of cyclic
prefix-orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (CP-OFDM) that is deployed in
4G LTE systems. CP-OFDM is the baseline of the 5G waveform discussions since
the performance of a new waveform is usually compared with it. The chapter
examines the essential characteristics of the major waveform candidates along
with the related advantages and disadvantages. It summarizes and compares the
key features of different waveforms.Comment: 22 pages, 21 figures, 2 tables; accepted version (The URL for the
final version:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781119333142.ch2
Multi-service Signal Multiplexing and Isolation for Physical-Layer Network Slicing (PNS)
Network slicing has been identified as one of the most important features for 5G and beyond to enable operators to utilize networks on an as-a-service basis and meet the wide range of use cases. In physical layer, the frequency and time resources are split into slices to cater for the services with individual optimal designs, resulting in services/slices having different baseband numerologies (e.g., subcarrier spacing) and / or radio frequency (RF) front-end configurations. In such a system, the multi-service signal multiplexing and isolation among the service/slices are critical for the Physical-Layer Network Slicing (PNS) since orthogonality is destroyed and significant inter-service/ slice-band-interference (ISBI) may be generated. In this paper, we first categorize four PNS cases according to the baseband and RF configurations among the slices. The system model is established by considering a low out of band emission (OoBE) waveform operating in the service/slice frequency band to mitigate the ISBI. The desired signal and interference for the two slices are derived. Consequently, one-tap channel equalization algorithms are proposed based on the derived model. The developed system models establish a framework for further interference analysis, ISBI cancelation algorithms, system design and parameter selection (e.g., guard band), to enable spectrum efficient network slicing
Spectrally and Energy Efficient Wireless Communications: Signal and System Design, Mathematical Modelling and Optimisation
This thesis explores engineering studies and designs aiming to meeting the requirements of enhancing capacity and energy efficiency for next generation communication networks. Challenges of spectrum scarcity and energy constraints are addressed and new technologies are proposed, analytically investigated and examined.
The thesis commences by reviewing studies on spectrally and energy-efficient techniques, with a special focus on non-orthogonal multicarrier modulation, particularly spectrally efficient frequency division multiplexing (SEFDM). Rigorous theoretical and mathematical modelling studies of SEFDM are presented. Moreover, to address the potential application of SEFDM under the 5th generation new radio (5G NR) heterogeneous numerologies, simulation-based studies of SEFDM coexisting with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) are conducted. New signal formats and corresponding transceiver structure are designed, using a Hilbert transform filter pair for shaping pulses. Detailed modelling and numerical investigations show that the proposed signal doubles spectral efficiency without performance degradation, with studies of two signal formats; uncoded narrow-band internet of things (NB-IoT) signals and unframed turbo coded multi-carrier signals. The thesis also considers using constellation shaping techniques and SEFDM for capacity enhancement in 5G system. Probabilistic shaping for SEFDM is proposed and modelled to show both transmission energy reduction and bandwidth saving with advantageous flexibility for data rate adaptation. Expanding on constellation shaping to improve performance further, a comparative study of multidimensional modulation techniques is carried out. A four-dimensional signal, with better noise immunity is investigated, for which metaheuristic optimisation algorithms are studied, developed, and conducted to optimise bit-to-symbol mapping. Finally, a specially designed machine learning technique for signal and system design in physical layer communications is proposed, utilising the application of autoencoder-based end-to-end learning. Multidimensional signal modulation with multidimensional constellation shaping is proposed and optimised by using machine learning techniques, demonstrating significant improvement in spectral and energy efficiencies
Cooperative multiterminal radar and communication: a new paradigm for 6G mobile networks
The impending spectrum congestion imposed by the emergence of new
bandwidth-thirsty applications may be mitigated by the integration of radar and
classic communications functionalities in a common system. Furthermore, the
merger of a sensing component into wireless communication networks has raised
interest in recent years and it may become a compelling design objective for
6G. This article presents the evolution of the hitherto separate radar and
communication systems towards their amalgam known as a joint radar and
communication (RADCOM) system. Explicitly, we propose to integrate a radio
sensing component into 6G. We consider an ultra-dense network (UDN) scenario
relying on an active multistatic radar configuration and on cooperation between
the access points across the entire coverage area. The technological trends
required to reach a feasible integration, the applications anticipated and the
open research challenges are identified, with an emphasis on high-accuracy
network synchronization. The successful integration of these technologies would
facilitate centimeter-level resolution, hence supporting compelling
high-resolution applications for next-generation networks, such as robotic cars
and industrial assembly lines.publishe
A survey of 5G technologies: regulatory, standardization and industrial perspectives
In recent years, there have been significant developments in the research on 5th Generation (5G) networks. Several enabling technologies are being explored for the 5G mobile system era. The aim is to evolve a cellular network that is intrinsically flexible and remarkably pushes forward the limits of legacy mobile systems across all dimensions of performance metrics. All the stakeholders, such as regulatory bodies, standardization authorities, industrial fora, mobile operators and vendors, must work in unison to bring 5G to fruition. In this paper, we aggregate the 5G-related information coming from the various stakeholders, in order to i) have a comprehensive overview of 5G and ii) to provide a survey of the envisioned 5G technologies; their development thus far from the perspective of those stakeholders will open up new frontiers of services and applications for next-generation wireless networks. Keywords: 5G, ITU, Next-generation wireless network
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