4.7 Article

Stochastic Geometry Modeling and Analysis of Multi-Tier Millimeter Wave Cellular Networks

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages 5038-5057

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TWC.2015.2431689

Keywords

Millimeter wave communications; multi-tier cellular networks; stochastic geometry

Funding

  1. European Commission [317126, 641985]

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In this paper, a new mathematical framework to the analysis of millimeter wave cellular networks is introduced. Its peculiarity lies in considering realistic path-loss and blockage models, which are derived from recently reported experimental data. The path-loss model accounts for different distributions of line-of-sight and non-line-of-sight propagation conditions and the blockage model includes an outage state that provides a better representation of the outage possibilities of millimeter wave communications. By modeling the locations of the base stations as points of a Poisson point process and by relying on a noise-limited approximation for typical millimeter wave network deployments, simple and exact integral as well as approximated and closed-form formulas for computing the coverage probability and the average rate are obtained. With the aid of Monte Carlo simulations, the noise-limited approximation is shown to be sufficiently accurate for typical network densities. The noise-limited approximation, however, may not be sufficiently accurate for ultra-dense network deployments and for sub-gigahertz transmission bandwidths. For these case studies, the analytical approach is generalized to take the other-cell interference into account at the cost of increasing its computational complexity. The proposed mathematical framework is applicable to cell association criteria based on the smallest path-loss and on the highest received power. It accounts for beamforming alignment errors and for multi-tier cellular network deployments. Numerical results confirm that sufficiently dense millimeter wave cellular networks are capable of outperforming micro wave cellular networks, in terms of coverage probability and average rate.

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