Beamforming with high dimensional antenna arrays provides the gain needed to enable high bandwidth communication in the sub-terahertz (THz) band. The resulting narrow beams, however, come at the cost of… Click to show full abstract
Beamforming with high dimensional antenna arrays provides the gain needed to enable high bandwidth communication in the sub-terahertz (THz) band. The resulting narrow beams, however, come at the cost of increased sensitivity to beam alignment errors. A potential remedy to this problem is to introduce a form a macrodiversity through non-coherent joint transmission (NC-JT). We employ a stochastic geometry framework to analyze the performance of a THz network employing user-centric base station clustering and NC-JT. We derive semi-closed form lower bounds for the coverage probability and ergodic capacity experienced by a typical user in the network. Our model includes THz networks without joint transmission as a special case. Overall, our analysis indicates that joint transmission from a few base stations improves coverage and capacity by mitigating the impact of beam misalignment. Moreover, in certain settings, NC-JT is a more efficient usage a network access points compared to the non-cooperative case, and reduces the sensitivity of coverage and capacity to the choice of user beamwidth.
               
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