The Interplay of Spectral Efficiency, User Density, and Energy in Grant-based Access Protocols

Abstract

We employ grant-based access with retransmissions for multiple users with small payloads, particularly at low spectral efficiency (SE). The radio resources are allocated via NOMA in the time into T slots and frequency dimensions, with a measure of non-orthogonality η. Retransmissions are stored in a receiver buffer with a finite size C buf and combined via HARQ, using Chase Combining (CC) and Incremental Redundancy (IR). We determine the best scaling for the SE (bits/rdof) and for the user density J/n, for a given number of users J and a blocklength n, versus SNR () per bit, i.e., the ratio Eb/N0, for the sum-rate optimal regime and when the interference is treated as noise (TIN), using a finite blocklength analysis. Contrasting the classical scheme (no retransmissions) with CC-NOMA, CC-OMA, and IR-OMA strategies in TIN and sum-rate optimal cases, the numerical results on the SE demonstrate that CC-NOMA outperforms, almost in all regimes, the other approaches. In the sum-rate optimal regime, the scalings of J/n versus Eb/N0 deteriorate with T, yet from the most degraded to the least, the ordering of the schemes is as (i) classical, (ii) CC-OMA, (iii) IR-OMA, and (iv) CC-NOMA, demonstrating the robustness of CC-NOMA. Contrasting TIN models at low , the scalings of J/n for CC-based models improve the best, whereas, at high , the scaling of CC-NOMA is poor due to higher interference, and CC-OMA becomes prominent due to combining retransmissions and its reduced interference. The scaling results are applicable over a range of η, T, C buf, and J, at low received SNR. The proposed analytical framework provides insights into resource allocation in grant-based access and specific 5G use cases for massive URLLC uplink access.

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