Abstract

Today’s growth in the volume of wireless devices coupled with the demand for data-intensive use cases has motivated the deployment of millimeter-wave (mmWave) small-cell networks. Although it is true that mmWave networks can carry a large volume of traffic, highly intermittent connectivity and the challenges related to installing many small-cell base stations (BSs) in urban geometry have impeded its progression into practical networks. To cope with these challenges, we present, in this paper, an approach to the mmWave BS deployment (site planning) problem, based on the minimum-deployment-cost criterion that is subject to user equipment (UE) outage constraints. Unlike the prior works, the proposed model captures the randomness of link blockage and signal-to-interference-plus-noise-ratio (SINR) statistics in mmWave networks. We formulate the minimum-cost deployment problem as large-scale integer nonlinear programming (INP). To deal with the coupled and combinatorial of the problem, the large-scale INP has approached to devise a suboptimal but efficient algorithm by decomposing it into two subproblems: (i) cell coverage optimization and (ii) minimum subset selection. We provide the solutions to each subproblem as well as theoretical justifications of them. Simulation results that illustrate UE outage guarantees of the proposed BS deployment method are presented. The results reveal that the proposed method uniquely distributes the macro-diversity orders that are distinct from other benchmarks.

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