Abstract

The transition to higher frequency bands, e.g., millimeter-wave (mmWave) and terahertz (THz), will be capitalized on the long term for future wireless communications. One of challenges relates to rapid establishment of mmWave/THz links with low beam training overhead due to highly directional transmission. A promising solution is to take advantage of the coexistence of sub-6 GHz, mmWave, and THz wireless networks and to use out-of-band spatial information for enabling fast beam search. The success depends on the spatial similarity of radio channels across different frequency bands. In this article we promote a feasibility study of low-frequency spatial channel information assisted high-frequency beam search from a radio channel point of view. We develop multi-band channel similarity measure of desired beam directions extracted from radio channels, which are obtained via filtering propagation paths by different beampatterns at different frequencies. Measurementand ray-tracing-based evaluations across multiple frequencies and environments are performed, which prove the usability of out-of-band information aided beam search strategy in line-ofsight (LOS) dominated scenario and even in non-LOS scenario. Finally, we discuss the challenges associated with exploiting spatial channel similarity.

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