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Journal ArticleDOI

LTE-advanced: next-generation wireless broadband technology [Invited Paper]

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TLDR
An overview of the techniques being considered for LTE Release 10 (aka LTEAdvanced) is discussed, which includes bandwidth extension via carrier aggregation to support deployment bandwidths up to 100 MHz, downlink spatial multiplexing including single-cell multi-user multiple-input multiple-output transmission and coordinated multi point transmission, and heterogeneous networks with emphasis on Type 1 and Type 2 relays.
Abstract
LTE Release 8 is one of the primary broadband technologies based on OFDM, which is currently being commercialized. LTE Release 8, which is mainly deployed in a macro/microcell layout, provides improved system capacity and coverage, high peak data rates, low latency, reduced operating costs, multi-antenna support, flexible bandwidth operation and seamless integration with existing systems. LTE-Advanced (also known as LTE Release 10) significantly enhances the existing LTE Release 8 and supports much higher peak rates, higher throughput and coverage, and lower latencies, resulting in a better user experience. Additionally, LTE Release 10 will support heterogeneous deployments where low-power nodes comprising picocells, femtocells, relays, remote radio heads, and so on are placed in a macrocell layout. The LTE-Advanced features enable one to meet or exceed IMT-Advanced requirements. It may also be noted that LTE Release 9 provides some minor enhancement to LTE Release 8 with respect to the air interface, and includes features like dual-layer beamforming and time-difference- of-arrival-based location techniques. In this article an overview of the techniques being considered for LTE Release 10 (aka LTEAdvanced) is discussed. This includes bandwidth extension via carrier aggregation to support deployment bandwidths up to 100 MHz, downlink spatial multiplexing including single-cell multi-user multiple-input multiple-output transmission and coordinated multi point transmission, uplink spatial multiplexing including extension to four-layer MIMO, and heterogeneous networks with emphasis on Type 1 and Type 2 relays. Finally, the performance of LTEAdvanced using IMT-A scenarios is presented and compared against IMT-A targets for full buffer and bursty traffic model.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the performance of multi‐hop wireless relay networks

TL;DR: The general model of WRNs is developed using distributed STBC, and the pairwise error probability and an approximation of the BER are derived, which provide guidelines about the expected error performance and the design of channel estimation for these networks.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Uplink multi-cluster scheduling with MU-MIMO for LTE-Advanced with carrier aggregation

TL;DR: A system-level simulation was conducted to investigate the performance gains that can be achieved in uplink CA with multi-cluster scheduling and MU-MIMO, and results show that with proper differentiation between power-limited and non-power-limited LTE-A users, multi-Cluster scheduling with CA has similar coverage performance as in Rel'8, but can achieve substantial gains in average user throughput.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distributed Resource Allocation for Multi-Cell Relay-Aided OFDMA Systems

TL;DR: A heuristic RA scheme that can lower the computational complexity further with much smaller reporting overhead is devised and an iterative algorithm that can easily implement the proposed RA scheme is suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Zero-Padded Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing with Index Modulation Using Multiple Constellation Alphabets

TL;DR: It is demonstrated via Monte Carlo simulations that ZTM-OFDM-IM is capable of enhancing the BER performance compared with the conventional OFDM and other conventional index-modulated OFDM benchmarks, which provides high-rate data transmission with low energy consumption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy Efficiency Improvement of Coded OFDM Systems Based on PAPR Reduction

TL;DR: It is revealed that, in addition to the improvement of the PA efficiency, carefully designed PAPR reduction techniques in fact have a potential of reducing the required signal-to-noise power ratio at a receiver for achieving a given target FER and reducing the duty cycle of a transmitter circuit for agiven target information rate.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Overview of UMTS Air-Interface Evolution

TL;DR: A preliminary look at the air interface for Evolved UTRA (E-UTRA) and associated key technologies required to reach its design objectives are provided.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On UMTS-LTE Physical Uplink Shared and Control Channels

TL;DR: The proposed channel estimation technique is shown to have significant gains in performance compared to other well known channel estimation techniques such as the maximum-likelihood (ML) and the inverse fast Fourier transform (IFFT) channel estimation methods.
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What is the difference between LTE and FIOS Internet?

LTE-Advanced (also known as LTE Release 10) significantly enhances the existing LTE Release 8 and supports much higher peak rates, higher throughput and coverage, and lower latencies, resulting in a better user experience.