DocumentCode
6918
Title
Device-to-device communication in 5G cellular networks: challenges, solutions, and future directions
Author
Tehrani, Mohsen Nader ; Uysal, Mustafa ; Yanikomeroglu, Halim
Author_Institution
Isfahan Univ. of Technol., Isfahan, Iran
Volume
52
Issue
5
fYear
2014
fDate
May-14
Firstpage
86
Lastpage
92
Abstract
In a conventional cellular system, devices are not allowed to directly communicate with each other in the licensed cellular bandwidth and all communications take place through the base stations. In this article, we envision a two-tier cellular network that involves a macrocell tier (i.e., BS-to-device communications) and a device tier (i.e., device-to-device communications). Device terminal relaying makes it possible for devices in a network to function as transmission relays for each other and realize a massive ad hoc mesh network. This is obviously a dramatic departure from the conventional cellular architecture and brings unique technical challenges. In such a two-tier cellular system, since the user data is routed through other users´ devices, security must be maintained for privacy. To ensure minimal impact on the performance of existing macrocell BSs, the two-tier network needs to be designed with smart interference management strategies and appropriate resource allocation schemes. Furthermore, novel pricing models should be designed to tempt devices to participate in this type of communication. Our article provides an overview of these major challenges in two-tier networks and proposes some pricing schemes for different types of device relaying.
Keywords
4G mobile communication; cellular radio; data privacy; radiofrequency interference; relay networks (telecommunication); resource allocation; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication security; 5G cellular networks; base stations; cellular architecture; device terminal relaying; device tier network; device-to-device communication; licensed cellular bandwidth; macrocell tier network; massive ad hoc mesh network; pricing models; resource allocation schemes; smart interference management strategy; transmission relays; two-tier cellular network; user data routing; Bandwidth; Cellular networks; Interference; Macrocell networks; Next generation networking; Pricing; Relays; Resource management; Security;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Communications Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0163-6804
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MCOM.2014.6815897
Filename
6815897
Link To Document