DocumentCode
3603841
Title
Directional Cell Discovery in Millimeter Wave Cellular Networks
Author
Barati, C. Nicolas ; Hosseini, S. Amir ; Rangan, Sundeep ; Pei Liu ; Korakis, Thanasis ; Panwar, Shivendra S. ; Rappaport, Theodore S.
Author_Institution
NYU WIRELESS Center, New York Univ., New York, NY, USA
Volume
14
Issue
12
fYear
2015
Firstpage
6664
Lastpage
6678
Abstract
The acute disparity between increasing bandwidth demand and available spectrum has brought millimeter wave (mmWave) bands to the forefront of candidate solutions for the next-generation cellular networks. Highly directional transmissions are essential for cellular communication in these frequencies to compensate for higher isotropic path loss. This reliance on directional beamforming, however, complicates initial cell search since mobiles and base stations must jointly search over a potentially large angular directional space to locate a suitable path to initiate communication. To address this problem, this paper proposes a directional cell discovery procedure where base stations periodically transmit synchronization signals, potentially in time-varying random directions, to scan the angular space. Detectors for these signals are derived based on a Generalized Likelihood Ratio Test (GLRT) under various signal and receiver assumptions. The detectors are then simulated under realistic design parameters and channels based on actual experimental measurements at 28 GHz in New York City. The study reveals two key findings: 1) digital beamforming can significantly outperform analog beamforming even when digital beamforming uses very low quantization to compensate for the additional power requirements and 2) omnidirectional transmissions of the synchronization signals from the base station generally outperform random directional scanning.
Keywords
array signal processing; cellular radio; millimetre wave devices; next generation networks; search problems; statistical testing; synchronisation; GLRT; New York City; angular directional space; base stations; cellular communication; directional beamforming; directional cell discovery procedure; directional transmissions; generalized likelihood ratio test; initial cell search; isotropic path loss; next-generation millimeter wave cellular networks; omnidirectional synchronization signal transmissions; power requirements; Array signal processing; Bandwidth; Base stations; Delays; Detectors; Mobile communication; Synchronization; Millimeter wave radio; cellular systems; directional cell discovery; millimeter wave radio;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1276
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TWC.2015.2457921
Filename
7161389
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