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      A D2D-based Protocol for Ultra-Reliable Wireless Communications for Industrial Automation

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          Abstract

          As one indispensable use case for the 5G wireless systems on the roadmap, ultra-reliable and low latency communications (URLLC) is a crucial requirement for the coming era of wireless industrial automation. This paper aims to develop communication techniques for making such a paradigm shift from the conventional human-type broadband communications to the emerging machine-type URLLC. One fundamental task for URLLC is to deliver a short command from the controller to each actuator within the stringent delay requirement and also with high-reliability in the downlink. Motivated by the geographic feature in industrial automation that in the factories many tasks are assigned to different groups of devices who work in close proximity to each other and thus can form clusters of reliable device-to-device (D2D) networks, this paper proposes a novel two-phase transmission protocol for achieving the above goal. Specifically, in the first phase within the latency requirement, the multi-antenna base station (BS) combines the messages of each group together and multicasts them to the corresponding groups; while in the second phase, the devices that have decoded the messages successfully, who are defined as the leaders, help relay the messages to the other devices in their groups. Under this protocol, we further design an innovative leader selection based beamforming strategy at the BS by utilizing the sparse optimization technique, which leads to the desired sparsity pattern in user activity, i.e., at least one leader exists in each group, in the first phase, thus making full utilization of the reliable D2D networks in the second phase. Simulation results are provided to show that the proposed two-phase transmission protocol considerably improves the reliability of the whole system within the stringent latency requirement as compared to other existing schemes for URLLC such as Occupy CoW.

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          Noncooperative Cellular Wireless with Unlimited Numbers of Base Station Antennas

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            Massive MIMO for Next Generation Wireless Systems

            , , (2014)
            Multi-user Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) offers big advantages over conventional point-to-point MIMO: it works with cheap single-antenna terminals, a rich scattering environment is not required, and resource allocation is simplified because every active terminal utilizes all of the time-frequency bins. However, multi-user MIMO, as originally envisioned with roughly equal numbers of service-antennas and terminals and frequency division duplex operation, is not a scalable technology. Massive MIMO (also known as "Large-Scale Antenna Systems", "Very Large MIMO", "Hyper MIMO", "Full-Dimension MIMO" & "ARGOS") makes a clean break with current practice through the use of a large excess of service-antennas over active terminals and time division duplex operation. Extra antennas help by focusing energy into ever-smaller regions of space to bring huge improvements in throughput and radiated energy efficiency. Other benefits of massive MIMO include the extensive use of inexpensive low-power components, reduced latency, simplification of the media access control (MAC) layer, and robustness to intentional jamming. The anticipated throughput depend on the propagation environment providing asymptotically orthogonal channels to the terminals, but so far experiments have not disclosed any limitations in this regard. While massive MIMO renders many traditional research problems irrelevant, it uncovers entirely new problems that urgently need attention: the challenge of making many low-cost low-precision components that work effectively together, acquisition and synchronization for newly-joined terminals, the exploitation of extra degrees of freedom provided by the excess of service-antennas, reducing internal power consumption to achieve total energy efficiency reductions, and finding new deployment scenarios. This paper presents an overview of the massive MIMO concept and contemporary research.
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              Channel Coding Rate in the Finite Blocklength Regime

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                03 October 2017
                Article
                1710.01265
                0a11888f-eb10-405f-885e-e4211c8666b2

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                submitted for possible publication
                cs.IT cs.SY math.IT

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