Coexistence analysis of 5g nr unlicensed and wigig in millimeter-wave spectrum

The emerging 5G New Radio (NR) cellular systems that may operate in millimeter-wave (mmWave) frequency bands are expected to offer larger bandwidths. They are to be deployed in densely crowded environments, where the traffic load has a high degree of variability, which may introduce capacity bottlenecks. One of the options to alleviate the latter is to concurrently utilize the radio resources available in unlicensedmmWave bands, e.g., at 60 GHz. In thiswork, we address the coexistence ofmmWave-based NRUnlicensed (NR-U) andWiGig technologies and account for the mmWave-specific directionality, propagation, and blockage effects. By further incorporating the features of duty cycling and random access operation, we construct a mathematical framework, which is capable of characterizing the achievable data rates of the NR-U users that operate over both licensed and unlicensed mmWave spectrum simultaneously. Our numerical results demonstrate that the rate attained by such devices is primarily regulated by the initial contention window size that, in its turn, heavily depends on the system and environmental parameters. We report the optimal contention window values for a wide range of blocker and user densities as well as antenna array configurations. © 2021 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.. All rights reserved.

Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Number of issue
11
Language
English
Pages
11721-11735
Status
Published
Volume
70
Year
2021
Organizations
  • 1 Peoples' Friendship University of Russia (RUDNUniversity), Moscow, Moskva, 117198, Russian Federation
  • 2 Institute of Informatics Problems, Federal Research Center Computer Science and Control of Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Moskva, 117198, Russian Federation
  • 3 Tampere University, Tampere, 33100, Finland
Keywords
Coexistence; Duty cycle; Listen before talk; Millimeter wave; NR-U; Performance analysis; WiGig
Date of creation
16.12.2021
Date of change
16.12.2021
Short link
https://repository.rudn.ru/en/records/article/record/76544/
Share

Other records