3,733 research outputs found
Short Packet Structure for Ultra-Reliable Machine-type Communication: Tradeoff between Detection and Decoding
Machine-type communication requires rethinking of the structure of short
packets due to the coding limitations and the significant role of the control
information. In ultra-reliable low-latency communication (URLLC), it is crucial
to optimally use the limited degrees of freedom (DoFs) to send data and control
information. We consider a URLLC model for short packet transmission with
acknowledgement (ACK). We compare the detection/decoding performance of two
short packet structures: (1) time-multiplexed detection sequence and data; and
(2) structure in which both packet detection and data decoding use all DoFs.
Specifically, as an instance of the second structure we use superimposed
sequences for detection and data. We derive the probabilities of false alarm
and misdetection for an AWGN channel and numerically minimize the packet error
probability (PER), showing that for delay-constrained data and ACK exchange,
there is a tradeoff between the resources spent for detection and decoding. We
show that the optimal PER for the superimposed structure is achieved for higher
detection overhead. For this reason, the PER is also higher than in the
preamble case. However, the superimposed structure is advantageous due to its
flexibility to achieve optimal operation without the need to use multiple
codebooks.Comment: Accepted at ICASSP 2018, special session on "Signal Processing for
Machine-Type Communications
Frame Structure Design and Analysis for Millimeter Wave Cellular Systems
The millimeter-wave (mmWave) frequencies have attracted considerable
attention for fifth generation (5G) cellular communication as they offer orders
of magnitude greater bandwidth than current cellular systems. However, the
medium access control (MAC) layer may need to be significantly redesigned to
support the highly directional transmissions, ultra-low latencies and high peak
rates expected in mmWave communication. To address these challenges, we present
a novel mmWave MAC layer frame structure with a number of enhancements
including flexible, highly granular transmission times, dynamic control signal
locations, extended messaging and ability to efficiently multiplex directional
control signals. Analytic formulae are derived for the utilization and control
overhead as a function of control periodicity, number of users, traffic
statistics, signal-to-noise ratio and antenna gains. Importantly, the analysis
can incorporate various front-end MIMO capability assumptions -- a critical
feature of mmWave. Under realistic system and traffic assumptions, the analysis
reveals that the proposed flexible frame structure design offers significant
benefits over designs with fixed frame structures similar to current 4G
long-term evolution (LTE). It is also shown that fully digital beamforming
architectures offer significantly lower overhead compared to analog and hybrid
beamforming under equivalent power budgets.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions for Wireless Communication
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