• DocumentCode
    3603224
  • Title

    Wireless Backhaul Networks: Capacity Bound, Scalability Analysis and Design Guidelines

  • Author

    Dhillon, Harpreet S. ; Caire, Giuseppe

  • Author_Institution
    Virginia Polytech. Inst. & State Univ., Blacksburg, VA, USA
  • Volume
    14
  • Issue
    11
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    6043
  • Lastpage
    6056
  • Abstract
    This paper studies the scalability of a wireless backhaul network modeled as a random extended network with multiantenna base stations (BSs), where the number of antennas per BS is allowed to scale as a function of the network size. The antenna scaling is justified by the current trend toward the use of higher carrier frequencies, which allows packing a large number of antennas in small form factors. The main goal is to study the per-BS antenna requirement that ensures scalability of this network, i.e., its ability to deliver nonvanishing rate to each source-destination pair. We first derive an information theoretic upper bound on the capacity of this network under a general propagation model, which provides a lower bound on the per-BS antenna requirement. Then, we characterize the scalability requirements for two competing strategies of interest: 1) long hop: each source-destination pair minimizes the number of hops by sacrificing multiplexing gain while achieving full beamforming (power) gain over each hop; and 2) short hop: each source-destination pair communicates through a series of short hops, each achieving full multiplexing gain. While long hop may seem more intuitive in the context of massive multiple-input-multiple-output transmission, we show that the short hop strategy is significantly more efficient in terms of per-BS antenna requirement for throughput scalability. As a part of the proof, we construct a scalable short hop strategy and show that it does not violate any fundamental limits on the spatial degrees of freedom.
  • Keywords
    MIMO communication; antenna arrays; array signal processing; minimisation; radio networks; radiowave propagation; capacity bound; design guidelines; full beamforming gain; general propagation model; hop number minimization; information theoretic upper bound; massive multiple-input-multiple-output transmission; multiantenna base stations; multiplexing gain; network size; per-BS antenna requirement; power gain; random extended network; scalable short hop strategy; source-destination pair; throughput scalability analysis; wireless backhaul networks; MIMO; Scalability; Throughput; Transmitting antennas; Upper bound; Wireless communication; Wireless backhaul network; capacity scaling; line-of-sight MIMO; random extended network;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1536-1276
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TWC.2015.2447534
  • Filename
    7128726