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Power-Domain Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (NOMA) in 5G Systems: Potentials and Challenges

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors comprehensively survey the recent progress of NOMA in 5G systems, reviewing the state-of-the-art capacity analysis, power allocation strategies, user fairness, and user-pairing schemes in NOMAs.
Abstract
Non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) is one of the promising radio access techniques for performance enhancement in next-generation cellular communications. Compared to orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA), which is a well-known high-capacity orthogonal multiple access (OMA) technique, NOMA offers a set of desirable benefits, including greater spectrum efficiency. There are different types of NOMA techniques, including power-domain and code-domain. This paper primarily focuses on power-domain NOMA that utilizes superposition coding (SC) at the transmitter and successive interference cancellation (SIC) at the receiver. Various researchers have demonstrated that NOMA can be used effectively to meet both network-level and user-experienced data rate requirements of fifth-generation (5G) technologies. From that perspective, this paper comprehensively surveys the recent progress of NOMA in 5G systems, reviewing the state-of-the-art capacity analysis, power allocation strategies, user fairness, and user-pairing schemes in NOMA. In addition, this paper discusses how NOMA performs when it is integrated with various proven wireless communications techniques, such as cooperative communications, multiple input multiple output (MIMO), beamforming, space time coding, and network coding, among others. Furthermore, this paper discusses several important issues on NOMA implementation and provides some avenues for future research.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Performance of NOMA in the Two-User SWIPT System

TL;DR: It is proved that NOMA performs better than OMA when the decoding energy consumption is negligible, however, for the nonnegligible decode energy consumption, it is shown that NomA is not always superior to OMA.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the Power Allocation and Constellation Selection in Downlink NOMA

TL;DR: This is the first attempt to analytically evaluate the BER in NOMA systems and derive and evaluate analytical bit error probability (BEP) expressions in order to propose the best combination of MCS and PAF.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis on Secrecy Capacity of Cooperative Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access With Proactive Jamming

TL;DR: Numerical results reveal the critical condition, under which NOMA is able to outperform orthogonal multiple access (OMA) in terms of secrecy rate, and can improve the secrecy rate by about 78.1%.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ensuring Max–Min Fairness of UL SIMO-NOMA: A Rate Splitting Approach

TL;DR: Numerical results verify that rate splitting SIMO-NOMA has higher minimum data rate and lower transmission latency than single-input multiple-output orthogonal multiple access (SIMO-OMA) and un-layered SIMO.
Journal ArticleDOI

Capacity and outage analysis of a dual-hop decode-and-forward relay-aided NOMA scheme

TL;DR: The performance improvement of the proposed DU-CNOMA over the conventional CRS using NOMA is proved through analysis and computer simulation, and the correctness of the author's analysis is provedthrough a strong agreement between simulation and analytical results.
References
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A simple transmit diversity technique for wireless communications

TL;DR: This paper presents a simple two-branch transmit diversity scheme that provides the same diversity order as maximal-ratio receiver combining (MRRC) with one transmit antenna, and two receive antennas.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a multiuser communication architecture for point-to-point wireless networks with additive Gaussian noise detection and estimation in the context of MIMO networks.
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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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-orthogonal multiple access for 5G: solutions, challenges, opportunities, and future research trends

TL;DR: The concept of software defined multiple access (SoDeMA) is proposed, which enables adaptive configuration of available multiple access schemes to support diverse services and applications in future 5G networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Millimeter-Wave Cellular Wireless Networks: Potentials and Challenges

TL;DR: 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.
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