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How Much Cache is Needed to Achieve Linear Capacity Scaling in Backhaul-Limited Dense Wireless Networks?

Published 9 May 2016 in cs.IT and math.IT | (1605.02552v1)

Abstract: Dense wireless networks are a promising solution to meet the huge capacity demand in 5G wireless systems. However, there are two implementation issues, namely the interference and backhaul issues. To resolve these issues, we propose a novel network architecture called the backhaul-limited cached dense wireless network (C-DWN), where a physical layer (PHY) caching scheme is employed at the base stations (BSs) but only a fraction of the BSs have wired payload backhauls. The PHY caching can replace the role of wired backhauls to achieve both the cache-induced MIMO cooperation gain and cache-assisted Multihopping gain. Two fundamental questions are addressed. Can we exploit the PHY caching to achieve linear capacity scaling with limited payload backhauls? If so, how much cache is needed? We show that the capacity of the backhaul-limited C-DWN indeed scales linearly with the number of BSs if the BS cache size is larger than a threshold that depends on the content popularity. We also quantify the throughput gain due to cache-induced MIMO cooperation over conventional caching schemes (which exploit purely the cached-assisted multihopping). Interestingly, the minimum BS cache size needed to achieve a significant cache-induced MIMO cooperation gain is the same as that needed to achieve the linear capacity scaling.

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