| Literature DB >> 27076701 |
Raúl Chávez-Santiago1, Michał Szydełko2, Adrian Kliks3, Fotis Foukalas4, Yoram Haddad5, Keith E Nolan6, Mark Y Kelly6, Moshe T Masonta7, Ilangko Balasingham1.
Abstract
As the rollout of 4G mobile communication networks takes place, representatives of industry and academia have started to look into the technological developments toward the next generation (5G). Several research projects involving key international mobile network operators, infrastructure manufacturers, and academic institutions, have been launched recently to set the technological foundations of 5G. However, the architecture of future 5G systems, their performance, and mobile services to be provided have not been clearly defined. In this paper, we put forth the vision for 5G as the convergence of evolved versions of current cellular networks with other complementary radio access technologies. Therefore, 5G may not be a single radio access interface but rather a "network of networks". Evidently, the seamless integration of a variety of air interfaces, protocols, and frequency bands, requires paradigm shifts in the way networks cooperate and complement each other to deliver data rates of several Gigabits per second with end-to-end latency of a few milliseconds. We provide an overview of the key radio technologies that will play a key role in the realization of this vision for the next generation of mobile communication networks. We also introduce some of the research challenges that need to be addressed.Entities:
Keywords: 5G; Radio spectrum; Small-cells; Software defined networking; Software defined radio; Traffic offloading
Year: 2015 PMID: 27076701 PMCID: PMC4821549 DOI: 10.1007/s11277-015-2467-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wirel Pers Commun ISSN: 0929-6212 Impact factor: 1.671
Examples of EU Projects researching technology beyond 4G
| Project name | Research area | Website |
|---|---|---|
| METIS 2020 | Laying the foundation for the future global mobile and wireless communication systems |
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| 5GNOW | Development of new PHY and MAC layer concepts better suited for heterogeneous transmissions in 5G |
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| SOLDER | Design and development of new spectrum overlay technology for efficient aggregation of heterogeneous bands (HetBands) |
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| iJOIN | Joint design/optimization of access network and backhaul, integrating small cells, heterogeneous backhaul, and centralized processing |
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| TROPIC | Distributed computing, storage, and radio resource allocation over cooperative femtocells |
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| MCN | Cloud computing for future mobile network deployment and operation |
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| COMBO | New integrated approaches for fixed/mobile converged broadband access/aggregation networks |
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| MOTO | Mobile Internet with terminal-to-terminal offloading technologies |
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| PHYLAWS | Privacy concepts for wireless communications exploiting propagation properties |
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Spectrum opportunities for 5G cognitive radios
| Spectrum opportunity | Objective | Cognitive radio application |
|---|---|---|
| 54–698 MHz | TV bands | Deployed under the carrier aggregation concept, i.e., using them as component carriers |
| 2.7–2.9 GHz | Bandwidth scaling from 2.7 to 3.4 GHz for enhanced flexible spectrum usage | Not specified yet |
| 3.4–3.6 GHz Band 43 | A smooth exploitation of the Band 43 from WiMAX to LTE | Co-deployment on top of the macro cell layer |
| 3.6–3.8 GHz | Contiguous carrier aggregation provision with the maximum 100 MHz bandwidth | Carrier aggregation application |
| 3.8–4.2 GHz | Macro cell and small cell layers’ deployment, i.e., heterogeneous networks (HetNets) | Carrier aggregation within HetNets |
| 60 GHz unlicensed band | Small cell backhaul deployment | Not specified yet |
Fig. 1Illustration of OFDM symbol windowing; is the duration of the OFDM symbol (including cyclic prefix), and is the duration of the symbol pre- and post-fix
Fig. 2Time-frequency representation of the generic multicarrier frame
Comparison of OFDM and FBMC
| Feature or parameter | OFDM | FBMC |
|---|---|---|
| Pulse shape | Pulse shape: rectangular (or almost rectangular in practical realizations due to various analogue filters) | Various shapes (e.g., IOTA, Gaussian, enhanced Gaussian pulse, Bellanger, etc.) |
| Cyclic prefix | Yes (up to 25 % of OFDM symbol duration) | No |
| Overlapping of pulses in time and frequency directions | Pulses do not overlap in time domain, orthogonality is preserved in frequency domain | Adjacent pulses overlap in both domains |
| AFLR | Poor (−13 dB for sinc-like shapes in frequency domain) | It can be kept very small (e.g., −60 dB for IOTA pulse) |
| Spectral efficiency | Limited by cyclic prefix | Limited by roll-off factor of the pulse |
| Complexity | It can be kept low; possible implementation with filter banks | It can be kept small, but always slightly higher than in OFDM; effective implementation with filter banks |
| Peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) | High | High (it can be almost at the same level as for OFDM) |
Fig. 3Indoor multicell Wi-Fi layout in which a BSS transmits VoIP traffic in the central cell with a radius equal to 30 m. a Configuration with 3 non-overlapping channels (13 overlapping channels are allocated in Europe on the 2.4 GHz band), and b configuration with 4 slightly overlapped channels
Fig. 4Bit-error-rate (BER) performance of the BSS VoIP transmission subjected to interference from surrounding cells in the layouts depicted in Fig. 3. In the isolated BSS case no interference from surrounding cells was present
Fig. 5Traffic offloading approaches for 5G systems
Fig. 65G as a blended infrastructure encompassing the range of cellular, local and personal area network, and short range technologies and their associated regulatory approaches, e.g., exclusive, light, licence-exempt, and shared spectrum models