431 research outputs found
Quasi-Dynamic Frame Coordination For Ultra- Reliability and Low-Latency in 5G TDD Systems
The fifth generation (5G) mobile technology features the ultra-reliable and
low-latency communications (URLLC) as a major service class. URLLC applications
demand a tight radio latency with extreme link reliability. In 5G dynamic time
division duplexing (TDD) systems, URLLC requirements become further challenging
to achieve due to the severe and fast-varying cross link interference (CLI) and
the switching time of the radio frame configurations (RFCs). In this work, we
propose a quasi-dynamic inter-cell frame coordination algorithm using hybrid
frame design and a cyclic-offset-based RFC code-book. The proposed solution
adaptively updates the RFCs in time such that both the average CLI and the
user-centric radio latency are minimized. Compared to state-of-the-art dynamic
TDD studies, the proposed scheme shows a significant improvement in the URLLC
outage latency, i.e., 92% reduction gain, while boosting the cell-edge capacity
by 189% and with a greatly reduced coordination overhead space, limited to
B-bit
Inter-Cell Radio Frame Coordination Scheme Based on Sliding Codebook for 5G TDD Systems
The fifth generation (5G) of the wireless communication networks supports
wide diversity of service classes, leading to a highly dynamic uplink (UL) and
downlink (DL) traffic asymmetry. Thus, dynamic time division duplexing (TDD)
technology has become of a significant importance, due to its radio frame
flexibility. However, fully dynamic TDD systems suffer from potentially severe
inter-cell cross link interference (CLI). In this paper, we propose a novel
inter-cell radio frame coordination (RFC) scheme based on sliding codebook for
fully dynamic TDD 5G networks. Proposed coordination scheme simultaneously
addresses two optimization objectives of minimizing the average CLI while
reliably maximizing the achievable DL/UL capacity, by virtually extending the
RFC degrees of freedom through a sliding phase-offset RFC codebook design.
Compared to the state-of-the-art TDD studies, the proposed scheme shows
significantly improved ergodic capacity, i.e., at least 40% gain under both the
TCP and UDP protocols, and with much less signaling overhead, limited to B-bit.
The paper offers valuable insights about how to most efficiently pre-mitigate
potential CLI in Macro TDD systems
Multi-User Preemptive Scheduling for Critical Low Latency Communications in 5G Networks
5G new radio is envisioned to support three major service classes: enhanced
mobile broadband (eMBB), ultra-reliable low-latency communications (URLLC), and
massive machine type communications. Emerging URLLC services require up to one
millisecond of communication latency with 99.999% success probability. Though,
there is a fundamental trade-off between system spectral efficiency (SE) and
achievable latency. This calls for novel scheduling protocols which
cross-optimize system performance on user-centric; instead of network-centric
basis. In this paper, we develop a joint multi-user preemptive scheduling
strategy to simultaneously cross-optimize system SE and URLLC latency. At each
scheduling opportunity, available URLLC traffic is always given higher
priority. When sporadic URLLC traffic appears during a transmission time
interval (TTI), proposed scheduler seeks for fitting the URLLC-eMBB traffic in
a multi-user transmission. If the available spatial degrees of freedom are
limited within a TTI, the URLLC traffic instantly overwrites part of the
ongoing eMBB transmissions to satisfy the URLLC latency requirements, at the
expense of minimal eMBB throughput loss. Extensive dynamic system level
simulations show that proposed scheduler provides significant performance gain
in terms of eMBB SE and URLLC latency
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