261 research outputs found
All Technologies Work Together for Good: A Glance to Future Mobile Networks
The astounding capacity requirements of 5G have motivated researchers to
investigate the feasibility of many potential technologies, such as massive
multiple-input multiple-output, millimeter wave, full-duplex, non-orthogonal
multiple access, carrier aggregation, cognitive radio, and network
ultra-densification. The benefits and challenges of these technologies have
been thoroughly studied either individually or in a combination of two or
three. It is not clear, however, whether all potential technologies operating
together lead to fulfilling the requirements posed by 5G. This paper explores
the potential benefits and challenges when all technologies coexist in an
ultra-dense cellular environment. The sum rate of the network is investigated
with respect to the increase in the number of small-cells and results show the
capacity gains achieved by the coexistence.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Wireless Communication, Special
Issue-5G mmWave Small Cell Networks: Architecture, Self-Organization and
Managemen
Mobile Edge Computing and Artificial Intelligence: A Mutually-Beneficial Relationship
This article provides an overview of mobile edge computing (MEC) and
artificial intelligence (AI) and discusses the mutually-beneficial relationship
between them. AI provides revolutionary solutions in nearly every important
aspect of the MEC offloading process, such as resource management and
scheduling. On the other hand, MEC servers are utilized to avail a distributed
and parallelized learning framework, namely mobile edge learning.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, IEEE ComSoc Technical Committees Newslette
Is Self-Interference in Full-Duplex Communications a Foe or a Friend?
This paper studies the potential of harvesting energy from the
self-interference of a full-duplex base station. The base station is equipped
with a self-interference cancellation switch, which is turned-off for a
fraction of the transmission period for harvesting the energy from the
self-interference that arises due to the downlink transmission. For the
remaining transmission period, the switch is on such that the uplink
transmission takes place simultaneously with the downlink transmission. A novel
energy-efficiency maximization problem is formulated for the joint design of
downlink beamformers, uplink power allocations and transmission time-splitting
factor. The optimization problem is nonconvex, and hence, a rapidly converging
iterative algorithm is proposed by employing the successive convex
approximation approach. Numerical simulation results show significant
improvement in the energy-efficiency by allowing self-energy recycling.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Signal Processing Letter
Full-Duplex Communications: Performance in Ultra-Dense Small-Cell Wireless Networks
Theoretically, full-duplex (FD) communications can double the
spectral-efficiency (SE) of a wireless link if the problem of self-interference
(SI) is completely eliminated. Recent developments towards SI cancellation
techniques have allowed to realize the FD communications on low-power
transceivers, such as small-cell (SC) base stations. Consequently, the FD
technology is being considered as a key enabler of 5G and beyond networks. In
the context of 5G, FD communications have been initially investigated in a
single SC and then into multiple SC environments. Due to FD operations, a
single SC faces residual SI and intra-cell co-channel interference (CCI),
whereas multiple SCs face additional inter-cell CCI, which grows with the
number of neighboring cells. The surge of interference in the multi-cell
environment poses the question of the feasibility of FD communications. In this
article, we first review the FD communications in single and multiple SC
environments and then provide the state-of-the-art for the CCI mitigation
techniques, as well as FD feasibility studies in a multi-cell environment.
Further, through numerical simulations, the SE performance gain of the FD
communications in ultra-dense massive multiple input multiple-output enabled
millimeter wave SCs is presented. Finally, potential open research challenges
of multi-cell FD communications are highlighted.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Vehicular Technology Magazine,
Special Issue on 5G Technologies and Application
NOMA in 5G Systems: Exciting Possibilities for Enhancing Spectral Efficiency
This article provides an overview of power-domain non-orthogonal multiple
access for 5G systems. The basic concepts and benefits are briefly presented,
along with current solutions and standardization activities. In addition,
limitations and research challenges are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, IEEE 5G Tech Focu
On the Performance of Network NOMA in Uplink CoMP Systems: A Stochastic Geometry Approach
To improve the system throughput, this paper proposes a network
non-orthogonal multiple access (N-NOMA) technique for the uplink coordinated
multi-point transmission (CoMP). In the considered scenario, multiple base
stations collaborate with each other to serve a single user, referred to as the
CoMP user, which is the same as for conventional CoMP. However, unlike
conventional CoMP, each base station in N-NOMA opportunistically serves an
extra user, referred to as the NOMA user, while serving the CoMP user at the
same bandwidth. The CoMP user is typically located at the cell-edge, whereas
users close to the base stations are scheduled as NOMA users. Hence, the
channel conditions of the two kind of users are very distinctive, which
facilitates the implementation of NOMA. Compared to the conventional orthogonal
multiple access based CoMP scheme, where multiple base stations serve a single
CoMP user only, the proposed N-NOMA scheme can support larger connectivity by
serving the extra NOMA users, and improve the spectral efficiency by avoiding
the CoMP user solely occupying the spectrum. A stochastic geometry approach is
applied to model the considered N-NOMA scenario as a Poisson cluster process,
based on which closed-form analytical expressions for outage probabilities and
ergodic rates are obtained. Numerical results are presented to show the
accuracy of the analytical results and also demonstrate the superior
performance of the proposed N-NOMA scheme
Network Coding with Link Layer Cooperation in Wireless Mesh Networks
In recent years, network coding has emerged as an innovative method that
helps wireless network approaches its maximum capacity, by combining multiple
unicasts in one broadcast. However, the majority of research conducted in this
area is yet to fully utilize the broadcasting nature of wireless networks, and
still assumes fixed route between the source and destination that every packet
should travel through. This assumption not only limits coding opportunities,
but can also cause buffer overflow in some specific intermediate nodes.
Although some studies considered scattering of the flows dynamically in the
network, they still face some limitations. This paper explains pros and cons of
some prominent research in network coding and proposes FlexONC (Flexible and
Opportunistic Network Coding) as a solution to such issues. The performance
results show that FlexONC outperforms previous methods especially in worse
quality networks, by better utilizing redundant packets spread in the network.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, IEEE International Conference on Communications
(ICC), 201
Performance Analysis of Network Coding with IEEE 802.11 DCF in Multi-Hop Wireless Networks
Network coding is an effective idea to boost the capacity of wireless
networks, and a variety of studies have explored its advantages in different
scenarios. However, there is not much analytical study on throughput and
end-to-end delay of network coding in multi-hop wireless networks considering
the specifications of IEEE 802.11 Distributed Coordination Function. In this
paper, we utilize queuing theory to propose an analytical framework for
bidirectional unicast flows in multi-hop wireless mesh networks. We study the
throughput and end-to-end delay of inter-flow network coding under the IEEE
802.11 standard with CSMA/CA random access and exponential back-off time
considering clock freezing and virtual carrier sensing, and formulate several
parameters such as the probability of successful transmission in terms of bit
error rate and collision probability, waiting time of packets at nodes, and
retransmission mechanism. Our model uses a multi-class queuing network with
stable queues, where coded packets have a non-preemptive higher priority over
native packets, and forwarding of native packets is not delayed if no coding
opportunities are available. Finally, we use computer simulations to verify the
accuracy of our analytical model.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing, 201
FlexONC: Joint Cooperative Forwarding and Network Coding with Precise Encoding Conditions
In recent years, network coding has emerged as an innovative method that
helps a wireless network approach its maximum capacity, by combining multiple
unicasts in one broadcast. However, the majority of research conducted in this
area is yet to fully utilize the broadcasting nature of wireless networks, and
still assumes fixed route between the source and destination that every packet
should travel through. This assumption not only limits coding opportunities,
but can also cause buffer overflow in some specific intermediate nodes.
Although some studies considered scattering of the flows dynamically in the
network, they still face some limitations. This paper explains pros and cons of
some prominent research in network coding and proposes a Flexible and
Opportunistic Network Coding scheme (FlexONC) as a solution to such issues.
Furthermore, this research discovers that the conditions used in previous
studies to combine packets of different flows are overly optimistic and would
affect the network performance adversarially. Therefore, we provide a more
accurate set of rules for packet encoding. The experimental results show that
FlexONC outperforms previous methods especially in networks with high bit error
rate, by better utilizing redundant packets spread in the network.Comment: 15 pages, 27 figure
Energy-Efficient Joint User-RB Association and Power Allocation for Uplink Hybrid NOMA-OMA
In this paper, energy efficient resource allocation is considered for an
uplink hybrid system, where non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) is integrated
into orthogonal multiple access (OMA). To ensure the quality of service for the
users, a minimum rate requirement is pre-defined for each user. We formulate an
energy efficiency (EE) maximization problem by jointly optimizing the user
clustering, channel assignment and power allocation. To address this hard
problem, a many-to-one bipartite graph is first constructed considering the
users and resource blocks (RBs) as the two sets of nodes. Based on swap
matching, a joint user-RB association and power allocation scheme is proposed,
which converges within a limited number of iterations. Moreover, for the power
allocation under a given user-RB association, we first derive the feasibility
condition. If feasible, a low-complexity algorithm is proposed, which obtains
optimal EE under any successive interference cancellation (SIC) order and an
arbitrary number of users. In addition, for the special case of two users per
cluster, analytical solutions are provided for the two SIC orders,
respectively. These solutions shed light on how the power is allocated for each
user to maximize the EE. Numerical results are presented, which show that the
proposed joint user-RB association and power allocation algorithm outperforms
other hybrid multiple access based and OMA-based schemes.Comment: Non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA), energy efficiency (EE), power
allocation (PA), uplink transmissio
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