4.7 Article

Millimeter Wave Integrated Access and Backhaul in 5G: Performance Analysis and Design Insights

Journal

IEEE JOURNAL ON SELECTED AREAS IN COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 37, Issue 12, Pages 2669-2684

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSAC.2019.2947997

Keywords

Load modeling; Wireless communication; Analytical models; Stochastic processes; Relays; Cellular networks; Resource management; Integrated access and backhaul; heterogeneous cellular network; mm-wave; 3GPP; wireless backhaul; stochastic geometry

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [CNS-1617896]

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With the emergence of integrated access and backhaul (IAB) in the fifth generation (5G) of cellular networks, backhaul is no longer just a passive capacity constraint in cellular network design. In fact, this tight integration of access and backhaul is one of the key ways in which 5G millimeter wave (mm-wave) heterogeneous cellular networks (HetNets) differ from traditional settings where the backhaul network was designed independently from the radio access network (RAN). With the goal of elucidating key design trends for this new paradigm, we develop a stochastic geometry-based analytical framework for a millimeter wave (mm-wave) two-tier HetNet with IAB where only the macro BSs (MBSs) have fiber access to the core network and the small cell BSs (SBSs) are wirelessly backhauled by the MBSs over mm-wave links. For this network, we derive the downlink rate coverage probability for two types of resource allocations at the MBS: 1) integrated resource allocation (IRA): where the total bandwidth (BW) is dynamically split between access and backhaul, and 2) orthogonal resource allocation (ORA): where a static partition is defined for the access and backhaul communications. Our analysis concretely demonstrates that offloading users from the MBSs to SBSs may not provide similar rate improvements in an IAB setting as it would in a HetNet with fiber-backhauled SBS. Our analysis also shows that it is not possible to improve the user rate in an IAB setting by simply densifying the SBSs due to the bottleneck on the rate of wireless backhaul links between MBS and SBS.

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