IEEE Access (Jan 2018)

Understanding UAV Cellular Communications: From Existing Networks to Massive MIMO

  • Giovanni Geraci,
  • Adrian Garcia-Rodriguez,
  • Lorenzo Galati Giordano,
  • David Lopez-Perez,
  • Emil Bjornson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2018.2876700
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6
pp. 67853 – 67865

Abstract

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The purpose of this paper is to bestow the reader with a timely study of UAV cellular communications, bridging the gap between the 3GPP standardization status quo and the more forward-looking research. Special emphasis is placed on the downlink command and control (C&C) channel to aerial users, whose reliability is deemed of paramount technological importance for the commercial success of UAV cellular communications. Through a realistic side-by-side comparison of two network deployments – a present-day cellular infrastructure versus a next-generation massive MIMO system – a plurality of key facts are cast light upon, with the three main ones summarized as follows: 1) UAV cell selection is essentially driven by the secondary lobes of a base station’s radiation pattern, causing UAVs to associate to far-flung cells; 2) over a 10 MHz bandwidth, and for UAV heights of up to 300 m, massive MIMO networks can support 100 kbps C&C channels in 74% of the cases when the uplink pilots for channel estimation are reused among base station sites, and in 96% of the cases without pilot reuse across the network; and 3) supporting UAV C&C channels can considerably affect the performance of ground users on account of severe pilot contamination, unless suitable power control policies are in place.

Keywords