New Radio Beam-based Access to Unlicensed Spectrum: Design Challenges and Solutions
Sandra Lagen, Lorenza Giupponi, Sanjay Goyal, Natale Patriciello,, Biljana Bojovic, Alpaslan Demir, Mihaela Beluri

TL;DR
This paper discusses the challenges and solutions for implementing beam-based NR-U access in unlicensed spectrum, focusing on coexistence, interference management, and regulatory compliance in millimeter-wave bands.
Contribution
It introduces new design considerations and solutions for beam-based NR-U, addressing coexistence and interference issues in unlicensed millimeter-wave spectrum.
Findings
Beam-based NR-U requires revised coexistence frameworks.
Directional antennas improve spatial reuse but complicate interference management.
Simulation results compare LBT procedures for NR-U/Wi-Fi coexistence.
Abstract
This paper elaborates on the design challenges, opportunities, and solutions for New Radio-based access to Unlicensed spectrum (NR-U) by taking into account the beam-based transmissions and the worldwide regulatory requirements. NR-U intends to expand the applicability of 5th generation New Radio access technology to support operation in unlicensed bands by adhering to Listen-Before-Talk (LBT) requirements for accessing the channel. LBT was already adopted by different variants of 4th generation Long Term Evolution (LTE) in unlicensed spectrum, i.e., Licensed-Assisted Access and MulteFire, to guarantee fair coexistence among different radio access technologies. In the case of beam-based transmissions, the NR-U coexistence framework is significantly different as compared to LTE in unlicensed spectrum due to the use of directional antennas, which enhance the spatial reuse but also…
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