4.7 Article

Performance of Offloading Strategies in Collocated Deployments of Millimeter Wave NR-U Technology

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VEHICULAR TECHNOLOGY
Volume 72, Issue 2, Pages 2535-2549

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TVT.2022.3213927

Keywords

Millimeter wave communication; IEEE 802; 11 Standard; Antenna arrays; Quality of service; Measurement; 3GPP; Resource management; NR-U; New Radio; overflow traffic; offloading; QoS; queuing theory; Markov chains

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In this paper, the deployment of NR-U base stations operating in licensed and unlicensed mmWave bands in the presence of WiGig traffic is investigated. Performance of different offloading strategies is compared using session loss probability as the main metric of interest.
5G New Radio (NR) technology operating in millimeter wave (mmWave) band is expected to be utilized in areas with high and fluctuating traffic demands such as city squares, shopping malls, etc. The latter may result in quality of service (QoS) violations. To deal with this challenge, 3GPP has recently proposed NR unlicensed (NR-U) technology that may utilize 60 GHz frequency band. In this paper, we investigate the deployment of NR-U base stations (BS) simultaneously operating in licensed and unlicensed mmWave bands in presence of competing WiGig traffic, where NR-U users may use unlicensed band as long as session rate requirements are met. To this aim, we utilize the tools of stochastic geometry, Markov chains, and queuing systems with random resource requirements to simultaneously capture NR-U/WiGig coexistence mechanism and session service dynamics in the presence of mmWave-specific channel impairments. We then proceed comparing performance of different offloading strategies by utilizing the eventual session loss probability as the main metric of interest. Our results show non-trivial behaviour of the collision probability in the unlicensed band as compared to lower frequency systems. The baseline strategy, where a session is offloaded onto unlicensed band only when there are no resources available in the licensed one, leads to the best performance. The offloading strategy, where sessions with heavier-than-average requirements are immediately directed onto unlicensed band results in just 2-5% performance loss. The worst performance is observed when sessions with smaller-than-average requirements are offloaded onto unlicensed band.

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