1. Introduction
Emerging 5G communications is directly attributable to the increasing bandwidth appetite of the wireless industry, majorly driven by the prevalent use of smart devices, advances in realistic Ultra High Definition (UHD) services, the unabated rise of social media and the need for network solutions for connected living, encompassing: smart cities, healthcare, manufacturing, energy, agriculture, transport, tracking and surveillance. While escalating demands for higher data rates and the popularity of the Internet of Things (IoT) are spawning apparent requirements for high network capacity, at the same time, energy-efficient design is gaining momentum as the fundamental requirement of future wireless networks. However, the emerging millimeter wave (mmWave)-driven complex spectrum techniques raise new challenges for the energy-efficient design aspirations.
The spectral efficiency of microwave links, responsible for all current wireless communications, is approaching its fundamental limit [
1], resulting in the progressively growing research interest towards the mmWave radio spectrum for 5G wireless communications. Large chunks of the radio spectrum at mmWave frequencies promise to bridge the gap between the limited “sub-GHz” bandwidth and the desire for high data services and massive connectivity [
2]. Although very attractive, the integration of the mmWave spectrum in wireless scenarios is complex, especially in view of high path and propagation losses at higher frequencies. Providentially, small mm wavelengths facilitate embedded antenna array architectures in portable devices. The practical compositions of antenna arrays are capable of focusing electromagnetic energy in desired directions (beams). Beams provide a viable solution to path loss impediments at higher frequencies [
3]. Thus, beam-based directional communication is an essential proposition for mmWave-based 5G communications [
1,
4]. The Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) has already started work on efficient alignment of New Radio access technology (NR) designed to operate in the high frequency spectrum (up to 100 GHz) [
5].
Establishing a wireless network using directional beam-based communication is relatively new and different from current omnidirectional wireless communication, as depicted in
Figure 1. Directivity changes the way the air interface is processed today, thereby challenging legacy mechanisms designed and optimized for omnidirectional communication. The broadcast transmission of paging messages to User Equipment (UE) in Discontinuous Reception (DRX) mode is one such mechanism that requires redesigning in directional 5G communication. In the LTE/LTE-A wireless system, the DRX mechanism is specified, which reduces the UE’s energy expenditure by configuring sleep periods. During the sleep period, most of the UE’s circuitry is turned off to save battery power [
6]. With rising computational expenses at the UE, due to higher order modulation and coding, beam searching overheads, massive MIMO technologies, raised quality expectations and increasing social/multimedia trends, it would be difficult to ignore DRX for energy conservation at the UE in 5G networks [
7]. Recently, 3GPP also acknowledged supporting the same in NR [
8].
Paging is an important mechanism that helps with directing an incoming call to a UE when it is an Idle mode DRX (IDRX) to conserve energy. Network broadcasts the paging messages in the cells to convey an intimation about the incoming call to the UE in IDRX mode [
9]. Since the spatial coverage of each Transmission (TX) beam is limited, the paging message broadcast becomes complicated in directional 5G communications. To cover the area of an entire cell, the paging message needs to be transmitted over all TX beams, as shown in
Figure 1. However, simultaneous transmission over all the beams is nonviable due to limited number of antenna panels at the gNB (5G base station is known as next generation NodeB (gNB)) [
8]. In mmWave 5G communications, beam sweeping is performed to cover a spatial area by transmitting various beams in different time slots in a deliberate fashion [
8,
10]. Thus, directional paging transmission over several beams would require multiple time slots to cover the entire cell, while legacy omnidirectional broadcast is possible in only one time slot per Paging Occasion (PO) [
10]. This is a crucial challenge since the network’s resource requirement for paging transmission would increase with the increase of the number of beams in directional 5G communications. We present a novel Partitioned UE ID-based Directional Paging (PIDP) mechanism to reduce paging resource overheads in 5G communications. The main contributions of this paper are summarized as follows:
The same paging message that is transmitted over several beams is majorly comprised of UE IDs of all the UE, configured in the PO. In PIDP, we propose to reduce the number of UE ID bits included in the paging message to reduce the overall paging resource overheads of the network.
We present a novel method for the configuration of POs in the IDRX cycle and an effective distribution of UE over various POs. The proposed configuration of POs in PIDP ensures that the network is able to page all the UE uniquely despite the fact that only partial UE IDs are transmitted in the paging message.
We perform numerical analysis to ascertain the advantages of PIDP. Paging resource overheads, the number of bits and time slots required for paging transmission and, subsequently, the base station’s power saving gain are analyzed with respect to variations in the number of beams and paging rate. Recent 5G parameters are considered for the analysis. We compare our proposed PIDP mechanism to directional paging transmission with full UE ID. The proposed PIDP mechanism manifests more than a power saving gain compared to directional paging transmission while using the full UE ID.
By reducing the number of bits included in the paging message transmitted by the network and by efficient reconfiguration of the POs, the PIDP mechanism reduces the network’s paging overheads. It is to be noted that each UE wakes up for a specific PO and monitors only one PO per IDRX cycle. Thus, the PIDP mechanism does not have any negative impact on the UE energy consumption, while at the same time, it achieves power saving in the network. The rest of this paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, we present the related work with a focus on the fundamentals of paging from both the UE’s and network’s perspective. The PIDP mechanism for directional paging and its system model are presented in
Section 3. In
Section 4, we evaluate the system performance of our PIDP proposal by varying the values of different parameters like UE ID size, number of beams and number of UE per PO. Finally, we draw conclusions in
Section 5.
3. Proposed PIDP Paging
In 5G directional communications, due to the limited spatial coverage of each beam, the same paging message is to be transmitted over different beams, resulting in very high paging overhead [
25]. In PIDP, we propose to reduce this rising paging overhead in 5G networks by reducing the number of bits included in the paging message being transmitted over different beams. The paging message in every PO is comprised of the UE IDs of all the UE paged in the PO along with RRC overhead bits (e.g., the number of UE IDs and padding), PDCCH bits and Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) bits. Network resources required for the broadcast of this paging message further depend on the number of UE and the number of beams. While the number of beams is related to the frequency of operation and the number of UE depends on the user density, the overhead bits are small. Thus, its is inconceivable to reduce beams, overhead bits or user density. Therefore, in this article, we propose to reduce bits for each UE ID included in the paging message, transmitted in every PO, to reduce directional paging overheads. For this, the UE ID is partitioned into two parts as shown in
Figure 3. The UE ID is considered to be comprised of
N bits. Instead of
N bits, only ‘
N2’ bits per UE are transmitted in the paging message for all the UE paged in the PO, such that
. The procedures related to the configuration of POs and the distribution of UE over different POs are redesigned in the PIDP mechanism such that the conflicts due to the short UE ID size transmission are avoided. It is thus important to carefully partition the UE ID considering both the bits that would be included in the paging message and also the bits that would be used to configure the PO. Three major steps of the proposed PIDP mechanism, (i) partitioning, (ii) configuring and (iii) distribution, can be elaborated as:
Partitioning: The first step of the PIDP mechanism involves partitioning of Nbits of the UE ID into two parts. UE ID Part 1 is comprised of the
least significant bits of the UE ID. UE ID Part 2 is made up of the
most significant bits of the UE ID.
and
together provide the complete information of the UE ID as shown in
Figure 3.
We propose that only UE ID Part 2 (comprised of bits) is transmitted in the paging message instead of the entire N bits. Since several UE are configured in each PO and there are multiple POs per IDRX cycle, the reduction in bits to be transmitted per UE would result in the saving of network resources. Moreover, the savings is expected to be substantial as the same paging message is transmitted over several beams.
Configuring: It is not always possible to page all UE in the same PO, and it depends on factors like paging load, tracking area size and user density. Thus, multiple POs are required in each IDRX cycle. Since the network is aware of paging load and other factors, it configures numerous POs in the LTE/LTE (A) system. In directional paging, as well, multiple POs would be required for the same reasons. However, in the PIDP mechanism, we propose that the network configures multiple POs in each IDRX cycle based on
bits (that is, UE ID Part 1). Let
be the number of POs that can be configured per IDRX cycle in PIDP, and it is evaluated as:
where
are the number of bits by which each UE ID size is cropped. The POs are subsequently mapped to all the possible bit configurations that can be attained using
bits. Thus, distinct PO in the IDRX cycle has a distinct
bit configuration associated with it. Unlike PO/PF evaluation in LTE (
Section 2.2), in the PIDP mechanism, we propose a novel and simplified mapping between POs and the least significant bits of the UE ID.
Distributing: In the legacy system, multiple POs are configured by the network in the IDRX cycle, and the UE are distributed over these POs. Similarly, in the PIDP mechanism, the UE are distributed over number of POs configured for each IDRX cycle. We propose that the UE with the same least significant bits are configured in the same PO. Thus, in PIDP, while only most significant bits of the UE ID (Part 2) are included in the paging message, least significant bits (Part 1) are used to distribute the UE over different POs. This ensures that the IDs of all the UE that are paged are uniquely identified by the network even though only partial bits are included in the paging message.
Figure 4 gives an example for the configuration of POs and the distribution of UE over the configured POs when
. For
, four POs are configured each with distinct bit sequence
and 11. All the UE with the same Least Significant Bits (LSBs) (e.g., 00) are distributed over the same PO (e.g.,
). In this example, only
bits per UE are included in the paging message. Though the reduction in the UE ID size per UE is expected to reduce the overall paging resource overheads in directional communication, at the same time, the configuration of POs and the distribution of the UE would also change. It is therefore important to analyze the performance of the PIDP mechanism considering all the related parameters to ascertain its gains. In the subsequent numerical analysis, we evaluate the PIDP gain taking into account the aforesaid partition and configuration.
PIDP System Model
For PIDP analysis, we first consider the number of POs configured by the network (evaluated using Equation (6). Subsequently, We can evaluate the UE per PO (
) based on the paging rate. Let
be the paging rate, defined as the number of UE to be paged per second. The paging rate can be established by accounting for various factors, for instance paging arrival rate, number of gNBs in a tracking area, user density per cell, type of paging scheme, etc. [
10].
can be evaluated as:
where
is the length of the IDRX cycle in seconds.
The paging message in every PO is comprised of the UE ID of all the UE configured in the PO along with RRC overhead bits (
), CRC bits (
) and PDCCH (
) bits. In PIDP, only the partial UE ID (
: UE ID Part 2 in
Figure 3) is included per UE in every PO. Moreover, in the directional interface, the same paging message needs to be transmitted over multiple beams. If
is the number of beams, then the bits to be transmitted per PO (
) are computed as:
We can calculate the bits that need to be transmitted per second (
) in PIDP as:
If
is the downlink cell edge spectral efficiency in bits/s/Hz and
is the system bandwidth in Hz, then the maximum number of bits,
, that can be transmitted in every second is calculated as:
Subsequently, we can evaluate the percentage of system capacity used in the PIDP mechanism (
) when the partial UE ID is used for directional paging in 5G communications as:
To ascertain the gains due to PIDP, we also evaluate the percentage of system capacity required when the full UE ID is transmitted for each UE in every PO for directional paging. Moreover, when the full UE ID (comprised of N bits) is transmitted, the network needs to configure only a limited number of POs depending on the paging rate and the maximum possible paging capacity [
10]. Let
be the minimum number of POs per second required for directional paging that includes the full user ID. We can evaluate
as:
where
is the maximum paging capacity defined as bits available for paging per time slot of duration
T seconds. The value of
is based on the number of bits that is available for transmitting the IDs of paged UE in a time slot for a given carrier with a certain carrier bandwidth.
can be evaluated as:
Similar to Equation (
9), we can evaluate bits to be transmitted per second
for directional paging with the full user ID for
number of POs as:
Subsequently, we can evaluate the percentage of system capacity used in directional paging when the full UE ID is included in the paging message as:
We also evaluate the effect of the PIDP proposal on the power savings at the base station. Fewer time slots for paging would facilitate the base station to sleep, resulting in power saving. Let
and
denote the number of time slots required per second for paging transmission in the PIDP mechanism and directional paging with the full UE ID, respectively.
can be evaluated as:
Similarly, we obtain
. Subsequently, we can evaluate power saving gain (
) as:
While
corresponds to bits required for directional paging with a shorter UE ID,
is evaluated for the full UE ID. Thus, the value of
is less than
. The second term in Equation (
17) becomes less than one, and positive power saving gains can be expected for the proposed PIDP mechanism.
4. Performance Analysis and Results
The numerical analysis of PIDP is conducted using MATLAB while considering the combined effect of: the reduction in the UE ID size (with respect to
) and re-configurations of POs (with respect to
and the paging rate). In directional communication, the paging resource overhead increases with the number of TX beams since the transmission of the paging message takes place over all the beams. Hence, in this section, we present the performance analysis of PIDP with respect to variations in the UE ID size, paging rate and the effect of the number of TX beams. Various parameters utilized for the analysis of the proposed PIDP mechanism are given in
Table 3. In the PIDP performance analysis, the downlink cell edge spectral efficiency is considered as paging is a broadcast communication and is intended to be received by all UE (near the cell edge, as well as at the cell center).
We first present the advantage of the PIDP mechanism with respect to variations in number of beams (16, 32, 64 and 128 beams).
Figure 5a,b delineates the percentage of system capacity required when the UE ID size reduces by
(
) and by
(
), respectively, for the PIDP mechanism.
Figure 5a,b also shows the comparison of the PIDP mechanism with the percentage of paging capacity required in directional paging with transmission incorporating the full UE ID (
) for the paging rate of 6400 UE/s. As the number of beams increases, the paging resource requirement increases since the paging needs to be transmitted over multiple beams (in turn, multiple time slots). However, the increase in
is less compared to directional paging with the full UE ID,
. For instance, while directional paging requires almost
of the system capacity, the requirement reduces to only around
of system capacity in PIDP for
and 64 TX beams. As expected, by reducing the number of bits, the paging resource requirement decreases despite the reconfigurations of the number of POs. The reduction in system capacity with
, shown in
Figure 5a, is more prominent compared to
in
Figure 5b. The effect of the decrease in
is consolidated in
Figure 5c.
Figure 5c demonstrates the effect of the decrease in the number of bits of the UE ID per UE (
) that are included in the paging message for the paging rates of 6400 UE/s when the transmission is executed over 64 TX beams. As the number of bits reduces, the percentage of system capacity initially reduces. However, it shows an overwhelming increase as the bits keep on reducing beyond a threshold (
) in the case of 64 TX beams and 6400 UE/s PR. This is because the network has to configure more POs (Equation (
5)) as
decreases (
increases) to ensure that it is able to uniquely page a UE even though a lesser number of bits is transmitted in the paging message.
The impact of variations in paging rate (UE/s) on the percentage of the system capacity required for paging transmission is highlighted in
Figure 5d for both the PIDP mechanism and directional paging with full UE ID transmission. In
Figure 5d, the paging rate variations are shown for 16, 64 and 128 number of beams. Moreover, to understand the impact of paging rate on the number of beams, for all the cases, the value of
is fixed at 32 in
Figure 5d. As the paging rate increases, both
and
increase. For a higher paging rate, the network configures more POs in the case of direction paging with the full UE ID (Equation (
12)). At the same time, in the PIDP mechanism, the UE per PO increases with the increase in paging rate (Equation (
7)). As a result, a higher percentage of system capacity is required for both
and
with the increase in the paging rate. At a paging rate of 4000 UE/s and for 128 beams, the percentage of system capacity required for paging with the full UE ID is
in comparison to only
in the PIDP mechanism.
Figure 6a demonstrates the base station’s power saving gain (
) as a percentage for PIDP with respect to variations in the paging rate for 64 beams. The gain is obtained in comparison to directional paging with the full user ID. Cropped UE ID sizes with values of
and 38 are considered since they are less than the threshold obtained in
Figure 5c. As the paging rate increases, the percentage of gain of PIDP increases. It can be observed from Equation (
17) that the power saving gain scales exponentially with the factor
. Therefore, while the increase is steeply exponential for lower values of
(32), it shows less variations for higher values of
(38) when the paging rate increases. For higher
(38), the factor
becomes less prominent compared to other terms and does not show a drastic effect on the gain percentage. For
bits, the number of POs configured in PIDP is high (
). When the paging rate is low (1600), the number of POs configured by the network is less in directional paging with the full UE ID. Thus the gain for 32 bits at a lower paging rate is not remarkable. However, as the paging rate increases, the number of POs in directional paging also increases, resulting in substantial gains. The number of POs for 34 bits in PIDP is noticeably less (
) than it was for 32 bits. Thus, for increasing paging rate, the power saving gain for 34 bits shows less variation compared to 32 bits.
In
Figure 6b, we show the effect of the increase in the number of beams on the power saving gain (in %) of PIDP for paging rates of 6400 UE/s and UE ID size values of
and 38. As is clear from the analysis, the number of TX beams does not affect either the number of POs or the UE per PO. Therefore, as the number of beams increases, the gain percentage remains constant. Thus, the PIDP mechanism substantiates uniform percentage gains for both a lower, as well as a higher number of beams. Moreover, as expected for a lower value of
(32), more gain is manifested compared to the higher value of
(38).