Short Packets over Block-Memoryless Fading Channels: Pilot-Assisted or Noncoherent Transmission?
Johan \"Ostman, Giuseppe Durisi, Erik G. Str\"om, Mustafa C., Co\c{s}kun, Gianluigi Liva

TL;DR
This paper derives bounds on the maximum coding rate for short packet transmission over Rician block-fading channels without channel state information, comparing noncoherent and pilot-assisted schemes to determine energy efficiency and optimal diversity.
Contribution
It provides tight bounds on coding rates, reveals noncoherent transmission's energy advantage, and offers practical PAT design guidelines for short packet communications.
Findings
Noncoherent transmission is more energy-efficient than PAT.
Optimal number of diversity branches minimizes energy per bit.
Designed PAT scheme approaches theoretical lower bounds.
Abstract
We present nonasymptotic upper and lower bounds on the maximum coding rate achievable when transmitting short packets over a Rician memoryless block-fading channel for a given requirement on the packet error probability. We focus on the practically relevant scenario in which there is no \emph{a priori} channel state information available at the transmitter and at the receiver. An upper bound built upon the min-max converse is compared to two lower bounds: the first one relies on a noncoherent transmission strategy in which the fading channel is not estimated explicitly at the receiver; the second one employs pilot-assisted transmission (PAT) followed by maximum-likelihood channel estimation and scaled mismatched nearest-neighbor decoding at the receiver. Our bounds are tight enough to unveil the optimum number of diversity branches that a packet should span so that the energy per bit…
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