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The Effect of Sand and Dust Storms (SDSs) and Rain on the Performance of Cellular Networks in the Millimeter Wave Band

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The Effect of Sand and Dust Storms (SDSs) and Rain on the Performance of Cellular Networks in the Millimeter Wave Band. / Olyaee, Maryam; Eslami, Mohsen; Navaie, Keivan et al.
In: IEEE Access, 26.06.2023.

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@article{c28052fa240641b88d73416949f6f633,
title = "The Effect of Sand and Dust Storms (SDSs) and Rain on the Performance of Cellular Networks in the Millimeter Wave Band",
abstract = "Future cellular systems are expected to use millimeter-wave (mm-Wave) frequency bands in addition to the existing microwave bands under 6 GHz. Severe weather conditions, including sand and dust storms (SDSs) and heavy rainfalls, challenge reliable communications over wireless links at those higher frequencies. In such conditions, besides frequency-dependent path-loss, radio signals experience additional attenuation. The SDS attenuation is related to visibility, receiver distance to the storm origin point, soil type, frequency, temperature and humidity. On the other hand, the rainfall attenuation is affected by rainfall rate, polarization, carrier frequency, temperature and raindrop size distribution. Leveraging on experimentalmeasurements carried out in previous works, a novel unified mathematical framework is introduced in this paper to include SDS/rainfall-dependent attenuation in the performance evaluation of terrestrial wireless cellular networks in terms of coverage probability, bit error rate (BER) and achievable rate in the mm-Wave band. Extensive numerical results are presented to show the effects of the different SDS/rainfall parameters on performance, showing that the degradation due to SDS is generally higher than that due to rain and may cause a reduction of even six orders of magnitude in the average achievable bit rate when the frequency increases from 28 to 38 GHz.",
author = "Maryam Olyaee and Mohsen Eslami and Keivan Navaie and Romero-Jerez, {Juan M} and Hadi Hashemi and Javad Haghighat and M Bahmanpour",
year = "2023",
month = jun,
day = "26",
language = "English",
journal = "IEEE Access",
issn = "2169-3536",
publisher = "Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Effect of Sand and Dust Storms (SDSs) and Rain on the Performance of Cellular Networks in the Millimeter Wave Band

AU - Olyaee, Maryam

AU - Eslami, Mohsen

AU - Navaie, Keivan

AU - Romero-Jerez, Juan M

AU - Hashemi, Hadi

AU - Haghighat, Javad

AU - Bahmanpour, M

PY - 2023/6/26

Y1 - 2023/6/26

N2 - Future cellular systems are expected to use millimeter-wave (mm-Wave) frequency bands in addition to the existing microwave bands under 6 GHz. Severe weather conditions, including sand and dust storms (SDSs) and heavy rainfalls, challenge reliable communications over wireless links at those higher frequencies. In such conditions, besides frequency-dependent path-loss, radio signals experience additional attenuation. The SDS attenuation is related to visibility, receiver distance to the storm origin point, soil type, frequency, temperature and humidity. On the other hand, the rainfall attenuation is affected by rainfall rate, polarization, carrier frequency, temperature and raindrop size distribution. Leveraging on experimentalmeasurements carried out in previous works, a novel unified mathematical framework is introduced in this paper to include SDS/rainfall-dependent attenuation in the performance evaluation of terrestrial wireless cellular networks in terms of coverage probability, bit error rate (BER) and achievable rate in the mm-Wave band. Extensive numerical results are presented to show the effects of the different SDS/rainfall parameters on performance, showing that the degradation due to SDS is generally higher than that due to rain and may cause a reduction of even six orders of magnitude in the average achievable bit rate when the frequency increases from 28 to 38 GHz.

AB - Future cellular systems are expected to use millimeter-wave (mm-Wave) frequency bands in addition to the existing microwave bands under 6 GHz. Severe weather conditions, including sand and dust storms (SDSs) and heavy rainfalls, challenge reliable communications over wireless links at those higher frequencies. In such conditions, besides frequency-dependent path-loss, radio signals experience additional attenuation. The SDS attenuation is related to visibility, receiver distance to the storm origin point, soil type, frequency, temperature and humidity. On the other hand, the rainfall attenuation is affected by rainfall rate, polarization, carrier frequency, temperature and raindrop size distribution. Leveraging on experimentalmeasurements carried out in previous works, a novel unified mathematical framework is introduced in this paper to include SDS/rainfall-dependent attenuation in the performance evaluation of terrestrial wireless cellular networks in terms of coverage probability, bit error rate (BER) and achievable rate in the mm-Wave band. Extensive numerical results are presented to show the effects of the different SDS/rainfall parameters on performance, showing that the degradation due to SDS is generally higher than that due to rain and may cause a reduction of even six orders of magnitude in the average achievable bit rate when the frequency increases from 28 to 38 GHz.

M3 - Journal article

JO - IEEE Access

JF - IEEE Access

SN - 2169-3536

ER -