59.0SPMar 17
Evaluating Smartphone GNSS Accuracy for Geofenced 6 GHz OperationsJoshua Roy Palathinkal, Hardani Ismu Nabil, Muhammad Iqbal Rochman et al.
The recently deployed 6 GHz spectrum in the U.S. utilizes distinct power categories, with the latest proposed "Geofenced Variable Power" (GVP) category permitting indoor and outdoor operations without continuous Automated Frequency Coordination (AFC) by relying instead on local databases of exclusion zones. Consequently, the safe operation of GVP devices depends entirely on reliable GNSS localization to respect these geofences. However, GNSS accuracy is highly variable and significantly degrades in environments like urban canyons or indoors. This paper presents the first comprehensive empirical study evaluating GNSS reliability specifically for GVP compliance. Utilizing the SigCap Android application, we document and compare GNSS accuracy across an extensive array of real-world conditions, encompassing urban versus suburban landscapes, varying mobility states (stationary, walking, driving), and indoor versus outdoor settings. The results demonstrate that while device hardware causes variations in GNSS accuracy, the operational environment is the primary driver of error. Indoor settings and dense urban areas consistently degrade localization. Moreover, outdoor positions adjacent to buildings often surprisingly produce significant inaccuracies, even near low-elevation structures. We further analyze the contribution of different GNSS constellations to device positioning and show that satellites from non-U.S.-licensed constellations-although currently used in a substantial portion of location fixes-are not permitted for regulatory geolocation under FCC requirements.
40.8NIApr 24
Evaluation of the effects of 3GPP-specific beamforming and channel estimation on the 3D EIRP profile of a 5G gNBArmed Tusha, Joshua Roy Palathinkal, Monisha Ghosh
Spatial domain exploitation through 3D beamforming serves as a critical technology enabler for performance enhancement in the Fifth Generation New Radio (5G NR) specification. This is realized at the gNodeB (gNB) through the integration of massive antenna element arrays that facilitates 3D spatial multiplexing. However, these systems with high-directional transmissions also represent a threat to incumbent services such as radar and satellites. These incumbents already operate in midband spectrum\textemdash{}including the 4.4-4.9 GHz and 7.125-7.4 GHz bands\textemdash{}that are currently being evaluated for future cellular deployments. Here, we present the first work that evaluates the transmitted Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) of a gNB in 3D space, using the 3GPP Release-18 standard for FR-1 instead of theoretical analyses of beam nulling, which can be simplistic. We shed light on the problems requiring attention with the EIRP profile in 3D space for existing codebook designs predefined in 3GPP: i) interference from a gNB does not depend only on the worst-case beamforming direction, but on a variety of beamforming directions due to side-lobes; ii) advanced antenna systems (AAS) architecture and antenna port configurations play a crucial role in average 3D EIRP, which are implementation dependent, and iii) we introduce two beam nulling methods, which achieve a 11 dB power reduction toward a target direction, with 3.5-4.5 dB SNR loss in UE link performance at a 10^{-4} bit error rate (BER) across modulation schemes under ideal and practical channel estimation, a higher loss compared to predictions from theoretical analyses.
37.8NIApr 6
Comprehensive Analysis of Cellular Uplink Performance in a Dense Stadium DeploymentS. M. Haider Ali Shuvo, Hardani Ismu Nabil, Joshua Roy Palathinkal et al.
Uplink performance remains a critical limitation in modern 5G networks, where UEs have to balance limited transmission power against propagation challenges. We conducted extensive measurements in the University of Notre Dame's football stadium, which has a seating capacity of 80,000 spectators, evaluating network behavior under both unloaded (pregame) and severely congested (game day) conditions, with a focus on uplink performance. Analyzing PHY-layer metrics captured via the Rohde & Schwarz QualiPoc, we show that high-frequency TDD bands in the uplink are severely bottlenecked in both the spectral and temporal domains. Despite transmitting near maximum 3GPP power limits, propagation loss inherent to high-frequency bands restricts UEs to low MCS indices and low PRB allocations, even in unloaded networks. This inability to achieve wideband allocation is further compounded by the significantly smaller number of uplink slots compared to downlink slots in TDD frames. Consequently, we observe a severe disparity between uplink and downlink: while high-frequency TDD bands carry the majority of downlink throughput, the network relies heavily on lower-frequency FDD bands for uplink. Additional measurements under favorable propagation conditions around a Verizon COW deployment located in the stadium parking lot also show that this limitation is not solely propagation-driven; rather, the duplexing scheme itself also plays a significant role. Even when TDD bands achieve higher or comparable MCS, FDD bands have a performance edge in the uplink due to the restrictive, downlink-heavy TDD architecture. These findings emphasize the indispensable role of low-frequency FDD spectrum in sustaining uplink capacity, providing insights that will help guide the design of next-generation wireless networks.