English

Millimeter Wave Cellular Networks: A MAC Layer Perspective

Information Theory 2015-07-14 v4 math.IT Optimization and Control

Abstract

The millimeter wave (mmWave) frequency band is seen as a key enabler of multi-gigabit wireless access in future cellular networks. In order to overcome the propagation challenges, mmWave systems use a large number of antenna elements both at the base station and at the user equipment, which lead to high directivity gains, fully-directional communications, and possible noise-limited operations. The fundamental differences between mmWave networks and traditional ones challenge the classical design constraints, objectives, and available degrees of freedom. This paper addresses the implications that highly directional communication has on the design of an efficient medium access control (MAC) layer. The paper discusses key MAC layer issues, such as synchronization, random access, handover, channelization, interference management, scheduling, and association. The paper provides an integrated view on MAC layer issues for cellular networks, identifies new challenges and tradeoffs, and provides novel insights and solution approaches.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1503.00697,
  title  = {Millimeter Wave Cellular Networks: A MAC Layer Perspective},
  author = {Hossein Shokri-Ghadikolaei and Carlo Fischione and Gabor Fodor and Petar Popovski and Michele Zorzi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1503.00697},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

21 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, to appear in IEEE Transactions on Communications

R2 v1 2026-06-22T08:42:22.831Z