Why to Decouple the Uplink and Downlink in Cellular Networks and How To Do It

March 23, 2015 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE Communications Magazine

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Authors Federico Boccardi, Jeffrey Andrews, Hisham Elshaer, Mischa Dohler, Stefan Parkvall, Petar Popovski, Sarabjot Singh arXiv ID 1503.06746 Category cs.NI: Networking & Internet Citations 216 Venue IEEE Communications Magazine Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Ever since the inception of mobile telephony, the downlink and uplink of cellular networks have been coupled, i.e. mobile terminals have been constrained to associate with the same base station (BS) in both the downlink and uplink directions. New trends in network densification and mobile data usage increase the drawbacks of this constraint, and suggest that it should be revisited. In this paper we identify and explain five key arguments in favor of Downlink/Uplink Decoupling (DUDe) based on a blend of theoretical, experimental, and logical arguments. We then overview the changes needed in current (LTE-A) mobile systems to enable this decoupling, and then look ahead to fifth generation (5G) cellular standards. We believe the introduced paradigm will lead to significant gains in network throughput, outage and power consumption at a much lower cost compared to other solutions providing comparable or lower gains.
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