System-Level Assessment of Shaped Elevation Beam Patterns for Hybrid Beamforming in mm-Wave 5G Networks With Spatially Heterogeneous Traffic
W. Chen (TU Delft - Microwave Sensing, Signals & Systems)
Y. Aslan (TU Delft - Microwave Sensing, Signals & Systems)
R. Litjens (TNO, TU Delft - Network Architectures and Services, TU Delft - Quantum & Computer Engineering)
Alexander Yarovoy (TU Delft - Microwave Sensing, Signals & Systems)
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Abstract
The throughput performance of intelligently shaped and fixed analog elevation beam patterns in millimeter-wave (mm-wave) base stations with hybrid beamforming (HBF) is assessed for the first time. Distinct spatially heterogeneous user distributions (i.e., uniform, near-site, cell-edge, and weighted uniform and near-site) and propagation environments (i.e., line-of-sight (LoS) with multipath and non-line-of-sight (NLoS) with multipath) are considered. The cosecant-squared and flat-top shaped beam patterns are compared to the benchmark pencil beam pattern with a straightforward electrical downtilt. The LoS simulation results show that in case of unknown weight of user distribution scenarios, the cosecant-squared pattern is the most robust, with a gain of up to 16% in the average system throughput and up to 34% in the 90th percentile user throughout compared to the benchmark. If the near-site case has a greater probability of occurrence than the uniform user distribution (e.g., due to daily events and festivals), the flat-top pattern becomes preferable. In the NLoS scenario, the considered HBF architectures with elevation beam pattern shaping do not bring any performance disadvantages compared to the benchmark HBF.