Rapid Fading Due to Human Blockage in Pedestrian Crowds at 5G Millimeter-Wave Frequencies
George R. MacCartney Jr., Theodore S. Rappaport, Sundeep Rangan

TL;DR
This study investigates how pedestrian-induced blockage causes rapid fading in 5G millimeter-wave channels, using measurements with different antenna beamwidths to develop models for realistic system design.
Contribution
It provides empirical data and models for pedestrian blockage effects on mmWave signals, highlighting the impact of antenna beamwidth on fade durations and depths.
Findings
Average fade durations are around 260-300 ms for different beamwidths.
Mean signal fade depths are inversely proportional to antenna beamwidth.
Asymmetric signal decay and rise times are observed during blockage events.
Abstract
Rapidly fading channels caused by pedestrians in dense urban environments will have a significant impact on millimeter-wave (mmWave) communications systems that employ electrically-steerable and narrow beamwidth antenna arrays. A peer-to-peer (P2P) measurement campaign was conducted with 7-degree, 15-degree, and 60-degree half-power beamwidth (HPBW) antenna pairs at 73.5 GHz and with 1 GHz of RF null-to-null bandwidth in a heavily populated open square scenario in Brooklyn, New York, to study blockage events caused by typical pedestrian traffic. Antenna beamwidths that range approximately an order of magnitude were selected to gain knowledge of fading events for antennas with different beamwidths since antenna patterns for mmWave systems will be electronically-adjustable. Two simple modeling approaches in the literature are introduced to characterize the blockage events by either a…
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