Title :
Soft forwarding device cooperation strategies for 5G radio access networks
Author :
Yu Cao ; Maaref, Amine
Author_Institution :
Huawei Technol. Canada Co., Ltd., Ottawa, ON, Canada
Abstract :
Device-to-device (D2D) connectivity is likely to represent a major enabling technology for future fifth generation (5G) radio access networks. In this paper, we introduce a new model for device cooperation in 5G radio access networks termed frequency-selective soft forwarding (FSSF). FSSF is based on soft-combining by a target user equipment (TUE) of selectively forwarded soft information data by a set of cooperating user equipments (CUEs) acting as mobile relays towards the TUE. FSSF exploits the inherent frequency selectivity and broadcast nature of the downlink radio access channel for the sake of enabling efficient device cooperation and seamless integration of D2D connectivity into cellular radio access networks. Several variants of FSSF are investigated, including centralized and distributed approaches, thus offering various tradeoffs of performance versus signaling overhead cost. Exhaustive simulation results using a state-of-the-art long-term evolution (LTE)-compliant link-level simulator show that FSSF well outperforms baseline device cooperation schemes relying on conventional decode-and-forward (DF) relaying and approaches the performance of optimal joint reception with significantly lower cost in terms of D2D resource utilization and signaling overhead.
Keywords :
5G mobile communication; Long Term Evolution; cellular radio; cooperative communication; radio access networks; resource allocation; telecommunication signalling; wireless channels; 5G radio access networks; CUE; D2D connectivity; D2D resource utilization; FSSF; LTE; Long-Term Evolution-compliant link-level simulator; TUE; cellular radio access networks; centralized approach; cooperating user equipments; device cooperation; device-to-device connectivity; distributed approach; downlink radio access channel; frequency selectivity; frequency-selective soft forwarding; future fifth generation radio access networks; optimal joint reception; signaling overhead; soft forwarding device cooperation strategies; soft information data; target user equipment; Bandwidth; Mobile communication; Performance evaluation; Protocols; Reliability; Resource management; Signal to noise ratio;
Conference_Titel :
Personal, Indoor, and Mobile Radio Communication (PIMRC), 2014 IEEE 25th Annual International Symposium on
DOI :
10.1109/PIMRC.2014.7136190