Outdoor Experiments on 5G Radio Access Using BS and UE Beamforming in 28-GHz Frequency Band
Autor: | Hideshi Murai, Kenneth Stewart, Daisuke Kurita, Atsushi Harada, Kiichi Tateishi, Shoji Itoh, Xiangyang Jeff Zhuang, Arne Simonsson, Jong-Kae Fwu, Peter Ökvist, Yoshihisa Kishiyama, Daisuke Kitayama |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Beamforming
business.industry Computer science Frequency band Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing MIMO Electrical engineering 020206 networking & telecommunications 02 engineering and technology Base station Handover Mobile station Telecommunications link 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering Path loss business |
Zdroj: | CCNC |
DOI: | 10.1109/ccnc.2019.8651808 |
Popis: | This paper presents outdoor field experimental results in the 28-GHz frequency band of a 5G radio access system where base stations (BSs) are installed on buildings to deploy a 5G trial area in the Tokyo Odaiba waterfront area. This is an early field trial assessment of key 5G features such as BS and mobile station (MS) beam tracking, being deployed in dense urban areas. In the trial area, a variety of key 5G technologies and conditions are evaluated such as BS and MS massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) antennas, beamforming and tracking, use of the high 28-GHz frequency, the wide frequency bandwidth of 400 MHz, intra-baseband unit (BBU) hand over (HO), and a coverage area in a realistic urban deployment with four different trial courses. Experimental results show that throughput exceeding 1 Gbps is achieved in the experiment area, and approximately 200 Mbps is achieved at 500 m away from the BS. We confirm that beam tracking and intra-BBU HO operate effectively while compensating for high path loss in the 28-GHz band to achieve a coverage area of 500 m. On the other hand, line of sight (LoS) and Non-LoS conditions are critical to 5G performance in the 28-GHz band, and we find that 5G connections may drop behind trees, buildings, and/or under a footbridge. The trial results show that the downlink throughput exceeds 50 Mbps in 85%, 50%, 70%, and 33% of the four different trial courses, respectively. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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