DocumentCode
42890
Title
Device-to-device communications and small cells: enabling spectrum reuse for dense networks
Author
Laya, Andres ; Kun Wang ; Widaa, Ashraf Awadelkarim ; Alonso-Zarate, Jesus ; Markendahl, Jan ; Alonso, Luis
Volume
21
Issue
4
fYear
2014
fDate
Aug-14
Firstpage
98
Lastpage
105
Abstract
In the evolution of communication networks, there has always been a need to increase the capacity to cope with the continuous growing demand for data transmission. However, with the arrival of the Internet-of-Things and the commoditization of broadband access through smartphones, tablets, smart-watches, and all types of connecting devices, future networks must be capable of providing higher bandwidth and Quality of Experience, as wellas operating in dense networks with a massive number of simultaneous connections. This high number of connections will be very heterogeneous, spanning from highly-demanding data rate applications to low-complexity and high energy-efficient Machine-to-Machine communications. In such a dense and complex scenario, a more flexible use of spectrum resources is deemed to be the way to meet the growing requirements for data transmission. In particular, this article focuses on Device-to-Device communications and small cell deployments as emerging facilitators of such a demanding and heterogeneous scenario. The pros and cons of both complementary strategies are identified from both a technical and a business point of view, and main standardization activities are discussed. The aim of this article is to identify and describe open challenges and to inspire new areas for research that make viable the next generation of dense networks.
Keywords
cellular radio; next generation networks; quality of experience; Internet-of-Things; broadband access commoditization; communication network evolution; complementary strategy; connecting devices; data transmission; device-to-device communications; energy-efficient machine-to-machine communication; highly-demanding data rate application; low-complexity machine-to-machine communication; main standardization activities; next generation dense network; quality of experience; small-cell deployments; smart-watches; smartphones; spectrum resources; spectrum reuse; tablets; Broadband communication; Interference; Microcells; Mobile communication; Mobile computing; Quality of service; Standardization;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Wireless Communications, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1284
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MWC.2014.6882301
Filename
6882301
Link To Document