Abstract

Device-to-device (D2D) communications, a promising technology, let cellular devices that are close to each other connect with one another directly, by passing the network infrastructure. As such, the technology provides the cellular network with many benefits, such as higher sum data rates, lower latency, extended coverage, higher energy efficiency, added security, higher spectral efficiency, and more useful services like inexpensive file caching. However, it comes with a cost—the interference underlaid D2D users inflict on cellular users at the base station when both use the same uplink frequency, which is the prefered reuse mode. This cost can, however, be reduced using a guard zone—a disk around the base station (BS) where D2D communications are not allowed. This simple and easy to implement approach, which has unfortunately not received enough research attention, is demonstrated in the present article to be highly effective in reducing the interference to cellular users. We leverage for this demonstration the mathematical tool of stochastic geometry. With the assumption that the BSs are distributed as a Poisson point process (PPP), we construct an analytical model to characterize the coverage probability of the cellular user in the presence of D2D nodes. The numerical results obtained, which are validated by rigorous Monte Carlo simulations, confirm that the guard zone approach is highly effective in protecting the cellular user from potential D2D interference.

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