TL;DR
This paper optimizes uplink energy efficiency in cellular networks with multislope path loss, finding that a small base station density maximizes efficiency, contrasting with single-slope models.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of energy efficiency considering multislope path loss and provides optimization strategies for base station density, pilot reuse, and antenna deployment.
Findings
Energy efficiency peaks at a small BS density.
Multislope path loss leads to unimodal EE behavior.
Optimized parameters improve network performance.
Abstract
This work aims to design the uplink (UL) of a cellular network for maximal energy efficiency (EE). Each base station (BS) is randomly deployed within a given area and is equipped with antennas to serve user equipments (UEs). A multislope (distance-dependent) path loss model is considered and linear processing is used, under the assumption that channel state information is acquired by using pilot sequences (reused across the network). Within this setting, a lower bound on the UL spectral efficiency and a realistic circuit power consumption model are used to evaluate the network EE. Numerical results are first used to compute the optimal BS density and pilot reuse factor for a Massive MIMO network with three different detection schemes, namely, maximum ratio combining, zero-forcing (ZF) and multicell minimum mean-squared error. The numerical analysis shows that the EE is a…
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