Abstract

Power-domain based dynamic spectrum access (PDSA) techniques are proposed for sharing 28 GHz spectrum of any Mobile Network Operator (MNO) with in-building small cells (SCs) of the other countrywide. By controlling the transmission power of SCs, PDSA techniques explore the traditional interweave access by operating an SC at the maximum transmission power and the underlay access by allowing to operate an SC at a lowered transmission power separately, as well as jointly. Average capacity, spectral efficiency, energy efficiency, cost efficiency, and throughput per SC user equipment (UE) are derived for an arbitrary number of MNOs in a country. By varying the spectrum reuse factor for the millimeter-wave spectrum in each building of SCs, extensive numerical and simulation results and analyses for an illustrative scenario of a country consisting of four MNOs are carried out for the interweave and underlay techniques when applying separately, as well as the hybrid interweave-underlay technique and the static licensed spectrum allocation (SLSA) technique. It is shown that, due to gaining more shared spectra, the hybrid interweave-underlay technique provides the best, whereas the SLSA provides the worst, performances of all techniques in terms of the average capacity, spectral efficiency, energy efficiency, cost efficiency, and throughput per UE of an SC. Moreover, we show that the hybrid interweave-underlay technique, the interweave technique, and the underlay technique, respectively, can satisfy the expected requirements of spectral and energy efficiencies for Sixth-Generation (6G) networks by reusing each MNO’s 28 GHz spectrum to SCs of about 33.33%, 50%, and 50% less number of buildings than that required by the SLSA for a spectrum reuse factor of six per building of small cells.

Highlights

  • Since the EE and cost efficiency (CE) are inversely proportional to the capacity [35], i.e., the available spectrum, the hybrid interweave-underlay technique improves the EE by about 73% and the CE by about 74.4% with respect to that of static licensed spectrum allocation (SLSA) (Figure 2)

  • We have proposed power-domain based dynamic spectrum access (PDSA) techniques to share the 28 GHz spectrum of one Mobile Network Operator (MNO) with small cells in a building of another MNO in a country

  • With numerical and simulation results, we have evaluated the performances of the interweave and underlay, as well as hybrid interweave-underlay spectrum access techniques, for an example scenario of four MNOs in a country

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Summary

Introduction

The following are contributed in this paper (i) The proposed techniques along with the system architecture are presented (ii) We derive generic expressions for the average capacity, spectral efficiency (SE), energy efficiency (EE), cost efficiency (CE), and throughput per small cell UE performance metrics for a country with an arbitrary number of MNOs (iii) Extensive numerical and simulation results and analyses are carried out to evaluate the performance when employing the interweave and underlay spectrum access techniques jointly, as well as separately (iv) we evaluate the SE and EE performances of the proposed techniques against the SE and EE requirements for Sixth-Generation (6G) networks (2) Novelty.

System Architecture and Proposed Techniques
28 GHz licensed millimeterwave spectrum countrywide
Mathematical Analysis
Performance Result and Analysis
Performance Result
10–7 Gain in CE responses due to spectrum reusing
Findings
Conclusion
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