5G Wireless Network Slicing for eMBB, URLLC, and mMTC: A Communication-Theoretic View
Petar Popovski, Kasper F. Trillingsgaard, Osvaldo Simeone, and, Giuseppe Durisi

TL;DR
This paper explores non-orthogonal resource sharing in 5G RAN slicing for heterogeneous services, proposing a communication-theoretic model that leverages reliability diversity to improve performance trade-offs.
Contribution
It introduces Heterogeneous Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (H-NOMA) and a new model accounting for diverse service requirements, demonstrating potential performance gains over orthogonal slicing.
Findings
H-NOMA can outperform orthogonal slicing in certain regimes.
Reliability diversity enables better performance guarantees.
Non-orthogonal sharing offers significant trade-off improvements.
Abstract
The grand objective of 5G wireless technology is to support three generic services with vastly heterogeneous requirements: enhanced mobile broadband (eMBB), massive machine-type communications (mMTC), and ultra-reliable low-latency communications (URLLC). Service heterogeneity can be accommodated by network slicing, through which each service is allocated resources to provide performance guarantees and isolation from the other services. Slicing of the Radio Access Network (RAN) is typically done by means of orthogonal resource allocation among the services. This work studies the potential advantages of allowing for non-orthogonal sharing of RAN resources in uplink communications from a set of eMBB, mMTC and URLLC devices to a common base station. The approach is referred to as Heterogeneous Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (H-NOMA), in contrast to the conventional NOMA techniques that…
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