76 research outputs found
Investigation on Evolving Single-Carrier NOMA into Multi-Carrier NOMA in 5G
© 2013 IEEE. Non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) is one promising technology, which provides high system capacity, low latency, and massive connectivity, to address several challenges in the fifth-generation wireless systems. In this paper, we first reveal that the NOMA techniques have evolved from single-carrier NOMA (SC-NOMA) into multi-carrier NOMA (MC-NOMA). Then, we comprehensively investigated on the basic principles, enabling schemes and evaluations of the two most promising MC-NOMA techniques, namely sparse code multiple access (SCMA) and pattern division multiple access (PDMA). Meanwhile, we consider that the research challenges of SCMA and PDMA might be addressed with the stimulation of the advanced and matured progress in SC-NOMA. Finally, yet importantly, we investigate the emerging applications, and point out the future research trends of the MC-NOMA techniques, which could be straightforwardly inspired by the various deployments of SC-NOMA
Analysis and Evaluation of Pattern Division Multiple Access Scheme Jointed With 5G Waveforms
Nonorthogonal multiple access (NOMA) techniques represent a key feature for 5G systems in order to increase multiple users' systems' capacity. In particular, we propose, for study, a pattern division multiple access (PDMA) technique, which denes a pattern matrix used for mapping the users to a group of resource elements that might be shared by multiple users. The contribution of this paper is the analysis of the performances, in terms of bit error rate (BER), of 5G candidate waveforms, such as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM), lter bank multi-carrier (FBMC), and generalized frequency division multiplexing (GFDM), in the PDMA scheme. Regarding the detection of different users' data, the successive interference cancellation algorithm is performed at the receiver side. The simulation results, consolidated by the analytic study, exhibit that OFDM and FBMC could be used in the NOMA context, while the BER related to GFDM is very high
Nonorthogonal Multiple Access for 5G and Beyond
This work was
supported in part by the U.K. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
(EPSRC) under Grant EP/N029720/1 and Grant EP/N029720/2. The work of
L. Hanzo was supported by the ERC Advanced Fellow Grant Beam-me-up
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