518 research outputs found
Massive MIMO for Internet of Things (IoT) Connectivity
Massive MIMO is considered to be one of the key technologies in the emerging
5G systems, but also a concept applicable to other wireless systems. Exploiting
the large number of degrees of freedom (DoFs) of massive MIMO essential for
achieving high spectral efficiency, high data rates and extreme spatial
multiplexing of densely distributed users. On the one hand, the benefits of
applying massive MIMO for broadband communication are well known and there has
been a large body of research on designing communication schemes to support
high rates. On the other hand, using massive MIMO for Internet-of-Things (IoT)
is still a developing topic, as IoT connectivity has requirements and
constraints that are significantly different from the broadband connections. In
this paper we investigate the applicability of massive MIMO to IoT
connectivity. Specifically, we treat the two generic types of IoT connections
envisioned in 5G: massive machine-type communication (mMTC) and ultra-reliable
low-latency communication (URLLC). This paper fills this important gap by
identifying the opportunities and challenges in exploiting massive MIMO for IoT
connectivity. We provide insights into the trade-offs that emerge when massive
MIMO is applied to mMTC or URLLC and present a number of suitable communication
schemes. The discussion continues to the questions of network slicing of the
wireless resources and the use of massive MIMO to simultaneously support IoT
connections with very heterogeneous requirements. The main conclusion is that
massive MIMO can bring benefits to the scenarios with IoT connectivity, but it
requires tight integration of the physical-layer techniques with the protocol
design.Comment: Submitted for publicatio
5G Wireless Network Slicing for eMBB, URLLC, and mMTC: A Communication-Theoretic View
The grand objective of 5G wireless technology is to support three generic
services with vastly heterogeneous requirements: enhanced mobile broadband
(eMBB), massive machine-type communications (mMTC), and ultra-reliable
low-latency communications (URLLC). Service heterogeneity can be accommodated
by network slicing, through which each service is allocated resources to
provide performance guarantees and isolation from the other services. Slicing
of the Radio Access Network (RAN) is typically done by means of orthogonal
resource allocation among the services. This work studies the potential
advantages of allowing for non-orthogonal sharing of RAN resources in uplink
communications from a set of eMBB, mMTC and URLLC devices to a common base
station. The approach is referred to as Heterogeneous Non-Orthogonal Multiple
Access (H-NOMA), in contrast to the conventional NOMA techniques that involve
users with homogeneous requirements and hence can be investigated through a
standard multiple access channel. The study devises a communication-theoretic
model that accounts for the heterogeneous requirements and characteristics of
the three services. The concept of reliability diversity is introduced as a
design principle that leverages the different reliability requirements across
the services in order to ensure performance guarantees with non-orthogonal RAN
slicing. This study reveals that H-NOMA can lead, in some regimes, to
significant gains in terms of performance trade-offs among the three generic
services as compared to orthogonal slicing.Comment: Submitted to IEE
Non-Orthogonal Contention-Based Access for URLLC Devices with Frequency Diversity
We study coded multichannel random access schemes for ultra-reliable
low-latency uplink transmissions. We concentrate on non-orthogonal access in
the frequency domain, where users transmit over multiple orthogonal subchannels
and inter-user collisions limit the available diversity. Two different models
for contention-based random access over Rayleigh fading resources are
investigated. First, a collision model is considered, in which the packet is
replicated onto available resources, of which are received
without collision, and treated as diversity branches by a maximum-ratio
combining (MRC) receiver. The resulting diversity degree depends on the
arrival process and coding strategy. In the second model, the slots subject to
collisions are also used for MRC, such that the number of diversity branches
is constant, but the resulting combined signal is affected by multiple
access interference. In both models, the performance of random and
deterministic repetition coding is compared. The results show that the
deterministic coding approach can lead to a significantly superior performance
when the arrival rate of the intermittent URLLC transmissions is low.Comment: 2019 IEEE 20th International Workshop on Signal Processing Advances
in Wireless Communications (SPAWC) - Special Session on Signal Processing for
NOMA Communication System
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