IEEE Access (Jan 2024)

Enhancing the Throughput of Device-to-Device Communication in Cellular Systems Using Non-Orthogonal Transmission

  • Chu-Tung Liu,
  • Hsuan-Jung Su,
  • Hsien-Bo Tseng,
  • Jhe-Yi Lin,
  • Wei-Hsiang Wang,
  • Alan Shenghan Tsai,
  • Yasuhiro Takano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2024.3439877
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. 112290 – 112307

Abstract

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Device-to-Device (D2D) communications facilitate direct data exchange between two devices, bypassing the necessity of routing through a central base station. This proximity-based communication offers advantages such as high data rates, low latency, reduced power consumption, and efficient frequency reuse. In the cellular spectrum, D2D operations encompass overlay D2D and underlay D2D. Overlay D2D allocates orthogonal radio resources to D2D and cellular users, resulting in inefficient frequency reuse. On the other hand, underlay D2D shares the same radio resources among D2D and cellular users, necessitating centralized coordination and extensive exchanges of channel and traffic information for effective interference management. To address the limitations of overlay and underlay D2D, we introduce a scheme that allows D2D users to simultaneously and non-orthogonally transmit both D2D and cellular signals. This approach resembles underlay D2D in terms of high frequency reuse but eliminates the need for centralized interference management. In this paper, we investigate various system design aspects based on this scheme, including power allocation, multiple-antenna extension, scheduling constraints, and different interference cancellation techniques. Incorporating a coordinated scheduling method, the proposed scheme enhances the sum rate of a conventional multiple-antenna overlay D2D system by 2.14 times, with only a negligible impact on the cellular communication rate. Furthermore, the proposed scheme improves the sum rate by up to 87% within conventional underlay D2D systems, all without the need for additional centralized coordination.

Keywords