Nokia 5g Radio Access White Paper
Nokia 5g Radio Access White Paper
Nokia 5g Radio Access White Paper
FutureWorks
5G Radio Access
System Design Aspects
Contents
1.
Executive Summary
2.1 Densification
2.2 Spectrum
3. Latency
4.
Energy Efficiency
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5.
System Integration
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6. Summary
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1.
Executive Summary
Wireless data traffic will grow 10,000 fold within the next 20 years
due to ultra-high resolution video streaming, cloud-based work,
entertainment and increased use of a variety of wireless devices.
These will include smartphones, tablets and other new devices,
including machine type communications for the programmable world.
To meet demand, Nokia envisions 5G as a system providing scalable
and flexible services with a virtually zero latency gigabit experience
when and where it matters. In addition, 5G will provide at least a tenfold improvement in the user experience over 4G, with higher peak
data rates, improved everywhere data rates and a ten-fold reduction
in latency.
5G mobile communications will have a wider range of use cases and
related applications including video streaming, augmented reality,
different ways of data sharing and various forms of machine type
applications, including vehicular safety, different sensors and real-time
control. Being introduced after 2020 and in use well beyond 2030, 5G
also needs the flexibility to support future applications that are not
yet fully understood or known.
In addition to the more traditional cellular access bands below 6 GHz,
5G is expected to exploit the large amount of spectrum between 6
GHz and 100 GHz. One or more new radio access technologies will be
needed to address this regime of frequency bands due to different
channel characteristics. Extending the LTE air-interface to
frequencies above 6 GHz may be considered, but it is likely that a
simpler and more efficient air interface can be designed to address
specific challenges.
For the end user, 5G should be transparent and it should be
seen as one system guaranteeing a consistent user experience.
Furthermore, mobile network operators expect a straightforward
5G deployment and operation. This calls for tight integration of 5G
layers with existing systems such as LTE and their evolution via Single
Radio Access Network (RAN) solutions. This approach will simplify
network management from 2G to 5G, and will also enable a gradual
introduction of 5G.
The network and deployment flexibility, as well as the air interface
design, will help curb the growth of energy consumption. The
consumed energy per delivered bit must go down drastically at both
ends of the radio link, for example, the energy used by unconnected
devices and in network nodes not operating at capacity.
A holistic, flexible design and a very tight integration of existing
technologies are key priorities for Nokia.
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2.1 Densification
The densification of network deployments is a trend already apparent
in 3G and 4G. 5G will enable us to design a flexible system from a
clean slate and allow optimization for cell sizes below a 200m intersite distance. In contrast to LTE, where the small cell design is based
on the rigid wide-area macro cell design, the clean-slate approach
allows a higher degree of optimization and adaptation to the small
cell sizes. It is, however, important that while optimizing the design for
Ultra Dense Network deployments with small cells, 5G will also bring
wide area macro cell deployments, further underlining the need for
design flexibility.
2.2 Spectrum
The frequencies allocated or under discussion for additional
bandwidth for cellular use have so far all been below 6 GHz, mostly
due to the favorable wide area coverage properties of the lower
frequencies. While more spectrum below 6 GHz is needed and there
are promising techniques to increase the use of already allocated
frequencies, there will be an increasing need to also unlock new
spectrum bands. These bands, from 6 to 100 GHz will help to meet
the high capacity and data rate requirements of the 5G era. The 6 to
100 GHz range can be broadly split in two parts, centimeter wave and
millimeter wave, based on different radio propagation characteristics
and the carrier bandwidth possible in the different frequency ranges.
The centimeter wave frequencies may be the next logical step
for cellular access as they are closer to currently used frequency
ranges, however, more research is needed to fully characterize radio
propagation in these bands. In some ways, centimeter waves behave
similarly to traditional cellular bands (e.g., reflections and path loss
exponents), but some effects will be different, such as the overall path
loss and diffraction, particularly at the higher end of the centimeter
wave band. The contiguous bandwidth that is potentially available at
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5G cmWave
5G below 6 GHz
5G mmWave
LTE-A/LTE-M/LAA LTE
and their evolution
1 GHz
2 GHz
6 GHz
10 GHz
20 GHz
30 GHz
60 GHz
100 GHz
Fig. 1. Candidates for LTE-A long-term evolution and new 5G access (please note the non-linear x-axis)
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3. Latency
Radio latency is the one-way transit time between a packet being
available at the IP layer in either the device / RAN edge node, and the
availability of this packet at the IP layer in the RAN edge node / device.
The relevance of latency is often overlooked by people focusing
on achievable data rates, but with high latency, even the fastest
connections cannot provide a good experience for interactive services.
Furthermore, when the TCP protocol is used, high latency will also
affect the achievable throughput.
One current example of a service that requires low latency is online
gaming. However, in future, the pool of interactive applications will
broaden very quickly as we see the rise of augmented reality, work and
entertainment in the cloud, automated cars and remotely controlled
robots. All of these applications require ultra low latencies for which a
5G system needs to be designed.
Reducing the radio latency is not only important for these interactive
services but is also an enabler for high data rates and the overall
responsiveness of the system. Achieving high data throughputs in
networks with high latency means that transmitter buffers need to be
large, increasing the device cost. Reducing the network latency means
that buffers are emptied faster and hence can be smaller and cheaper.
Also, the speed of all network procedures, such as system access or
handover, relies on radio latency.
Reduced air interface latency and high data rates contribute to
lowering the devices battery consumption. Fast transitions between
sleep and active modes, micro-sleep within a frame when data is not
transmitted or received, a short active time with high data rates and
a low sleep mode power consumption all contribute to improving the
energy efficiency of the device.
The latency of 4G/LTE is superior to that of 3G, but still inferior to
what can be achieved with the wired Internet. One way to reduce radio
interface latency is by using dynamic TDD with a short frame duration
and an adaptive frame structure. Dynamic TDD involves different
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UL and DL
control
channels
frequency
UL or DL data channels
time
Fig. 2. Slot structure for flexible TDD
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4.
Energy Efficiency
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5. System Integration
The ultra dense network of the future will on average have only a
few users per cell for which 5G requirements need to be fulfilled at
any given time. However, users are expected to use a wide range
of different services and applications with very different traffic
requirements. Hence, the network needs to adapt flexibly to the traffic
conditions in each cell. The small cell layer or layers providing capacity
at above 6 GHz spectrum bands should have features like dynamic
TDD with short TTI and low-overhead frame structure, massive MIMO/
beamforming with phased arrays, and direct device-to-device links, in
order to achieve this adaptability.
The integration of the small cell frequency layer to the wide area
layer, or where there are multiple small cell frequency layers, their
integration with each other and with the wide area layer, is essential
for both efficient resource utilization and energy efficiency. Consider
a network with a wide area coverage layer deployed at sub-6 GHz
frequencies using several tens of MHz of bandwidth, a micro-cellular
capacity layer on cmWave frequencies with 100-200 MHz bandwidth,
and an indoor capacity layer on mmWave frequencies with 1-2 GHz
bandwidth. In the simplest case, the device would be connected to
one layer at a time, depending on the coverage availability and the
needs of the services used. However, in some cases, such as when
needing ultra-reliability with constant latency, a simple one-layer-ata-time connectivity is no
longer
and a tighter
co-operation
To change
the sufficient
document information
in the footer,
press [Alt + F8] and use the FORM
between the layers is needed to improve the system performance.
Control/data
split
WA-UDN-layer
coordination
WA layer
cmWave
layer
mmWave
layer
Multi-layerconnectivity
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The underlying wide area layer has the potential to act as the
coordination layer, simply by directing the devices connection down to
coordinating the scheduling of different cells in the small cell layer(s)
for best use of resources. The wide area layer can also act as the
signaling connection layer, maintaining control plane connectivity while
the user plane is handed over to the small cells. This architecture gives
advantages in terms of mobility and reliability, since the device has a
fixed anchor point for a large area and the number of mobility events
is greatly reduced.
6. Summary
5G will be an ultra-fast and ultra-flexible communication network
including different technologies, but will be transparent for the end
user and easy to manage for the operator. Additionally, 5G needs
to address the predicted large increase in data traffic and will have
to fulfill the capacity, data rate and latency requirements of nextgeneration devices.
To enable the capacity and data rate requirements for 5G, new
spectrum bands are required, along with the massive densification
of small cells. Ultra dense small cells will be a key element of 5G
deployment and these small cells need to be deployed over a wide
frequency range. Hence the design needs to be flexible enough so
that the system could be deployed in bands ranging from 2 GHz to
100 GHz. Both the cmWave and mmWave layers will support a set of
common features like dynamic TDD, massive MIMO/beamforming,
device-to-device communications, and a frame structure with low
overhead and shorter frame size. Where the layers differ is on the
use of moderate or high bandwidth, implementation of MIMO/
Beamforming schemes and interference co-ordination and
mitigation schemes.
Moreover, flexibility is required to support a wide range of services
and requirements. The network needs to support, for example, ultrahigh reliability for critical communications, for example in vehicle-tovehicle communications, but also very loose reliability requirements
for low cost Internet of Things applications, such as reports from
humidity sensors. High data rate machine-to-machine applications
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3G
2G
Unied solution:
For end user: transparent
integration, 5G appearing as one
system with consistent user
experience
For operator: a tight integration
enabling simplied network
management of the whole access
portfolio and gradual
introduction of 5G.
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Nokia Solutions and Networks 2015
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