Wireless Device-to-Device Caching Networks: Basic Principles and System Performance
Mingyue Ji, Giuseppe Caire, and Andreas F. Molisch

TL;DR
This paper explores how device-to-device caching networks can significantly improve wireless video streaming efficiency by leveraging content reuse and advanced caching strategies, outperforming traditional base station methods.
Contribution
It presents recent theoretical results on throughput scaling laws for D2D caching networks and proposes a holistic system design incorporating microwave and millimeter-wave links.
Findings
D2D caching networks achieve near-optimal throughput scaling.
The proposed scheme outperforms base station-only approaches in simulations.
Spatial reuse and coded multicasting provide similar throughput benefits.
Abstract
As wireless video transmission is the fastest-growing form of data traffic, methods for spectrally efficient video on-demand wireless streaming are essential to service providers and users alike. A key property of video on-demand is the asynchronous content reuse, such that a few dominant videos account for a large part of the traffic, but are viewed by users at different times. Caching of content on devices in conjunction with D2D communications allows to exploit this property, and provide a network throughput that is significantly in excess of both the conventional approach of unicasting from the base station and the traditional D2D networks for regular data traffic. This paper presents in a semi-tutorial concise form some recent results on the throughput scaling laws of wireless networks with caching and asynchronous content reuse, contrasting the D2D approach with a competing…
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