Pilot-assisted short-packet transmission over multiantenna fading channels: A 5G case study

2018 52nd Annual Conference on Information Sciences and Systems (CISS)(2018)

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Abstract
Leveraging recent results in finite-blocklength information theory, we investigate the problem of designing a control channel in a 5G system. The setup involves the transmission, under stringent latency and reliability constraints, of a short data packet containing a small information payload, over a propagation channel that offers limited frequency diversity and no time diversity. We present an achievability bound, built upon the random-coding union bound with parameter s (Martinez & Guillen i Fabregas, 2011), which relies on quadrature phase-shift keying modulation, pilot-assisted transmission to estimate the fading channel, and scaled nearest-neighbor decoding at the receiver. Using our achievability bound, we determine how many pilot symbols should be transmitted to optimally trade between channel-estimation errors and rate loss due to pilot overhead. Our analysis also reveals the importance of using multiple antennas at the transmitter and/or the receiver to provide the spatial diversity needed to meet the stringent reliability constraint.
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Key words
control channel,short data packet,information payload,propagation channel,frequency diversity,time diversity,random-coding union,quadrature phase-shift keying modulation,fading channel,nearest-neighbor decoding,pilot symbols,channel-estimation errors,pilot overhead,spatial diversity,short-packet transmission,multiantenna fading channels,finite-block length information theory
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