Millimeter wave (mmWave) communications have been postulated as one of the
most disruptive technologies for future 5G systems. Among mmWave bands the
60-GHz radio technology is specially suited for ultradense small cells and
mobile data offloading scenarios. Many challenges remain to be addressed in
mmWave communications but among them deafness, or misalignment between
transmitter and receivers beams, and interference management lie among the most
prominent ones. In the recent years, scenarios considering negligible
interference on mmWave resource allocation have been rather common in
literature. To this end, interestingly, many open issues still need to be
addressed such as the applicability of noise-limited regime for mmWave.
Furthermore, in mmWave the beam-steering mechanism imposes a forced silence
period, in the course of which no data can be conveyed, that should not be
neglected in throughput/delay calculations. This paper introduces mmWave
enabled Small Cell Networks (SCNs) with relaying capabilities where as a result
of a coordinated meta-heuristically optimized beamwidth/alignment-delay
approach overall system throughput is optimized. Simulations have been conveyed
for three transmitter densities under TDMA and naive 'all-on' scheduling
producing average per node throughput increments of up to 248%. The paper
further elaborates on the off-balancing impact of alignment delay and
time-multiplexing strategies by illustrating how the foreseen transition that
increasing the number of transmitters produces in the regime of a fixed-node
size SCN in downlink operation fades out by a poor choice in the scheduling
strategy.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, European Wireless 2016 Conferenc