IEEE Access (Jan 2018)
Reliability Analysis of Uplink Grant-Free Transmission Over Shared Resources
Abstract
Uplink grant-free schemes have the promise of reducing the latency of a user-equipmentinitiated transmission by avoiding the handshaking procedure for acquiring a dedicated scheduling grant. However, the possibility of successfully delivering a payload within a latency constraint may be severely compromised in case of grant-free operations over shared radio resources. In this paper, we study the performance of two different uplink grant-free schemes over shared resources recently discussed within the fifth generation new radio standardization, namely, a solution based on a stop-and-wait (SAW) protocol and a blind retransmission approach. Performance is evaluated assuming Rayleigh fading channels with a maximum ratio combining (MRC) multi-antenna receiver. Analytical results show the benefits of grant-free transmission with respect to the traditional grant-based approach for a tight latency constraint. A highorder receive diversity is beneficial to leverage the MRC gain and enables the possibility of achieving the 10-5 outage probability target set for ultra-reliable low-latency communication services. The blind retransmission approach is significantly penalized by identification and signaling errors, while a SAW solution with potentially scheduled retransmissions out of the shared bandwidth leads to the lowest outage probability, at least for frequent packet arrivals.
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