Intelligent Reflective Surface vs. Mobile Relay-supported NLoS Avoidance in Indoor mmWave Networks
Maria Bustamante Madrid, Jeroen Famaey, Filip Lemic

TL;DR
This paper compares Intelligent Reflective Surfaces and Mobile Relays for improving non-line-of-sight communication in indoor mmWave networks, finding that Mobile Relays generally offer better end-to-end link quality.
Contribution
It introduces an approach to determine optimal placement of IRS and MR in indoor environments for enhanced communication performance.
Findings
Mobile Relays outperform IRSs in link quality.
Optimal placement strategies improve NLoS communication.
MRs offer higher throughput potential.
Abstract
The 6th generation of wireless communication (6G) is envisioned to give rise to various technologies for improving the end-to-end communication performance, where the communication is envisioned to utilize wireless signals in the millimeter wave (mmWave) frequencies and above. Among others, these technologies comprise Intelligent Reflective Surfaces (IRSs) and Mobile Relays (MRs), whose envisaged roles include mitigating the negative effects of Non-Line-of-Sight (NLoS) connectivity, in particular at mmWave and higher frequencies. The core idea behind these technologies is to use cooperative networking where the source sends a signal to a repeater, in this case the IRS or the MR, which is upon reception forwarded to the destination. When comparing the two technologies, it is important to realize that the IRSs are primarily envisioned to be static entities attached to various objects in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Wireless Communication Technologies · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies
