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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Millimeter-Wave Cellular Wireless Networks: Potentials and Challenges

Sundeep Rangan, +2 more
- Vol. 102, Iss: 3, pp 366-385
TLDR
Measurements and capacity studies are surveyed to assess mmW technology with a focus on small cell deployments in urban environments and it is shown that mmW systems can offer more than an order of magnitude increase in capacity over current state-of-the-art 4G cellular networks at current cell densities.
Abstract
Millimeter-wave (mmW) frequencies between 30 and 300 GHz are a new frontier for cellular communication that offers the promise of orders of magnitude greater bandwidths combined with further gains via beamforming and spatial multiplexing from multielement antenna arrays. This paper surveys measurements and capacity studies to assess this technology with a focus on small cell deployments in urban environments. The conclusions are extremely encouraging; measurements in New York City at 28 and 73 GHz demonstrate that, even in an urban canyon environment, significant non-line-of-sight (NLOS) outdoor, street-level coverage is possible up to approximately 200 m from a potential low-power microcell or picocell base station. In addition, based on statistical channel models from these measurements, it is shown that mmW systems can offer more than an order of magnitude increase in capacity over current state-of-the-art 4G cellular networks at current cell densities. Cellular systems, however, will need to be significantly redesigned to fully achieve these gains. Specifically, the requirement of highly directional and adaptive transmissions, directional isolation between links, and significant possibilities of outage have strong implications on multiple access, channel structure, synchronization, and receiver design. To address these challenges, the paper discusses how various technologies including adaptive beamforming, multihop relaying, heterogeneous network architectures, and carrier aggregation can be leveraged in the mmW context.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Reliable OFDM-Based MMW Mobile Fronthaul With DSP-Aided Sub-Band Spreading and Time-Confined Windowing

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Block Distributed Compressive Sensing-Based Doubly Selective Channel Estimation and Pilot Design for Large-Scale MIMO Systems

TL;DR: In this article, a block distributed compressive sensing-based doubly selective (DS) channel estimator for large-scale MIMO systems was proposed, where the common sparsity of the basis expansion model (BEM) coefficients among all the BEM orders and all the transmit-receive antenna pairs was analyzed.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

LSTM-Based Multi-Link Prediction for mmWave and Sub-THz Wireless Systems

TL;DR: A novel long short term memory (LSTM)-based method for predicting multi-directional link quality in mmWave systems and is validated on two problems: A realistic simulation of multi-cell link tracking in an environment with randomly moving human and vehicular blockers at 28 and 140 GHz, and beam prediction in a real indoor setting at 60 GHz.
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A 15-Gb/s Wireless ON-OFF Keying Link

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that very high data- rates may be achieved using binary modulation and short symbols generated in an efficient V-band transmitter, and is benchmarked against state-of-the-art transceiver systems with multigigabit per second data-rates.
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Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice

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Millimeter Wave Mobile Communications for 5G Cellular: It Will Work!

TL;DR: The motivation for new mm-wave cellular systems, methodology, and hardware for measurements are presented and a variety of measurement results are offered that show 28 and 38 GHz frequencies can be used when employing steerable directional antennas at base stations and mobile devices.
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Scaling Up MIMO: Opportunities and Challenges with Very Large Arrays

TL;DR: The gains in multiuser systems are even more impressive, because such systems offer the possibility to transmit simultaneously to several users and the flexibility to select what users to schedule for reception at any given point in time.
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Five disruptive technology directions for 5G

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe five technologies that could lead to both architectural and component disruptive design changes: device-centric architectures, millimeter wave, massive MIMO, smarter devices, and native support for machine-to-machine communications.
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Femtocell networks: a survey

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