Abstract

This paper proposes the site-specific pathloss model for a small town in a suburban environment at millimeter wave. Also, the site general characteristics are provided in the entire measurement area of the small town. The proposed pathloss model is based on the moving measurement campaign according to the distance between a transmitter and a receiver in the candidate millimeter wave band or future five-generation service. In addition, the probability characteristics of pathloss such as the cumulative density function are shown to estimate the spreading characteristics of the wideband signal with a five-hundred-MHz bandwidth. Measurement was performed for the small town in a suburban covered with low-rise commercial restaurants or houses. Transmitting signals propagate through the over rooftop of low-rise houses of average ten meters height. Their multipath signals may be arrived at a receiving station located at the below roof of the house by reflection, diffraction, and scattered mechanism. A current propagation model for the over rooftop is based on generic or geometrical optic equations in a fully non-line-of-sight environment. But, non-line-of-sight cases in a realistic suburban environment include partly the open space between houses. Therefore, the definition of the propagation model of this sight-specific case is very important so clearly as to show the difference for the over rooftop according to the different displacements of houses in a non-line-of-sight environment. Finally, we suggest the improved propagation model of pathloss that can reflect various environments in a small town.

1. Introduction

Feasibility studies are currently being conducted on the millimeter frequency band over 20 GHz [15]. On the other hand, the collected measurement and analysis data is still lacking. The millimeter wave (mm-Wave) spectrum provides greater bandwidth than 400 MHz over commercial applications, but the propagation of mm-Wave signals may be much less favorable. In high-density deployments, a wideband mm-Wave signal can provide an alternative to cell segmentation by increasing the capacity of each hotspot cell. Due to the limited propagation range of mm-Wave signals, future mobile applications will focus on hotspot cells in outdoor urban and suburban environments. The focus of this paper is on the urban low-rise (suburban) deployments with cell radiuses ranging from 63 to 514 m. Measurement-based studies take into account actual Tx and Rx positions. Measurements were performed at regular Rx locations to collect statistics for various wireless parameters such as the pathloss factors and multipath components. You can use this information to understand the actual coverage of cells operating in the millimeter frequency band and perform system-level simulations based on the experience propagation model.

A recommendation in [6], which is based on the EURO-COST231 Walfisch-Ikegami model in [7], provides a short-distance pathloss estimation method within 1 km and includes the site-general and site-specific pathloss model for the over rooftop propagation. On the site-general model, the applicable frequency range and environment is limited up to 66.5 GHz in an urban environment. On the site-specific model based on the geometrical optic (GO) mechanism, the applicable frequency range is limited up to 16 GHz in an urban environment and up to 38 GHz in a suburban area. However, the recommendation does not provide the propagation prediction model in the suburban area on the site-general characteristics and in the suburban area on the site-specific characteristics including partly the open space between houses. Therefore, the estimation error of recommendation is too large to be useful for a realistic suburban environment including partly the open space between houses [8]. In [9], the pathloss prediction model for the over rooftop propagation in the suburban area at the microwave band is based on the propagation mechanism explained by using the GO and consists of the direct wave region, the reflected wave region, and the diffracted wave region. The boundary points of these regions can be determined uniquely from the antenna height and house environment, and all regions are continuously connected. Hence, the estimation of pathloss can be predicted from the short-distance line-of-sight region to the far-field non-line-of-sight region. Approaches to prediction of the over rooftop buildings apply to the residential of the city [10]. All buildings were assumed to be of the same height. The average received signals depend on transmitter antenna height and multigeometric diffraction statistics. In [11], when the receiver below a single building measures the signal power and the transmitter is much higher than the building roof but lower than the satellite, such as the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) communication link, the site-specific pathloss prediction applied a single knife-edge diffraction model based on the GO mechanism. Basic propagation elements such as reflection, diffraction, and scattering produce multipath propagation. In [12], multipath propagation effects predicted the wireless channel characteristics using the 2-ray or 3-ray simulation analysis based on the ray tracing mechanism in the time or frequency domain. In [1315], various propagation models such as 2-ray ground pathloss model, ITU-R street canyon model, and combined pathloss and shadowing model were used to evaluate the impact on system performance in mobile networks. In addition to this, the use of any propagation model has a significant impact on the performance of the wireless communication network [16]. In [17, 18], a measurement-based analysis of 38 GHz mm-Wave propagation in urban areas has been conducted with narrow beamwidth antennas and focused on the characterization of various basic factors, which are required in the propagation model, such as the line of sight, reflection, diffraction, and transmission. Based on ray tracing using a simplified 3D geometric description of the propagation environment, the map-based channel model was presented at six different frequencies between 2 and 60 GHz [19].

However, existing data and forecasting methods do not reflect the realistic environments with partially open spaces between houses in a suburban small town. To provide a realistic assessment of mm-Wave propagation in a suburban area, we estimated using site-specific modeling and conducted measurements on the 32.4 GHz channel. The pathloss model for the over rooftop propagation in the mm-Wave band considering the above concerns is proposed for the 5G generation service. The proposed pathloss model consists of three parts: the direct wave dominant region, the reflected dominant region, and the diffracted dominant region.

2. Measurement Campaign

2.1. Measurement Environment and Scenario

In high-density deployments, the wideband of the mm-Wave signal can provide an alternative to the cell plan by greatly increasing the capacity of individual small cells. Because the mm-Wave system consists of small cells, the relative pathloss and the cell coupling change quickly. From a system point of view, this means that connectivity is very intermittent and communications must be able to adapt quickly. Due to the limited range of the mm-Wave signals, most cellular applications in the mm-Wave system focus on small cells with the cell radius of 100 m or 500 m in the outdoor urban environment. The channel measurement sites based on the urban low-rise (suburban) environment are carefully selected. During measurement, the location of the transmitting antenna is fixed on the roof of a tall building, so you should be able to see over the roof of every house in the whole measuring area. Measurement environments include low-rise houses, grid roads, multiple vehicles, and auxiliary facilities. There are two types of wireless links when working locally in a small town environment with regular grid roads except for some road blocks. One is a line-of-sight (LoS) link, and the other is a non-line-of- sight (NLoS) link. When Rx is covered by houses or obstacles and the transmit antenna of Tx is not visible at the Rx location, the NLoS link occurs. Measurement was carried out in a small town of the city.

The characteristics of a small town are shown in Figure 1. A small town with an urban low-rise (suburban) environment shows the layout of regular houses with three or four floors. And the roof of the house is sloping or flat-type.

As shown in Figure 2, a transmitter (Tx), mounted on a 2 m high tripod, is installed on a roof with the height () of 42 m above the ground level. A receiver (Rx) is at a height () of 1.5 m above the ground level. Tx and Rx are the single-frequency modes with an occupied bandwidth (BW) of 500 MHz. The center of operating frequency is 32.4 GHz. The maximum Tx output power () is 27 dBm/BW. The antennas of Tx and Rx are a type of aperture horn with a directional gain.

In Figure 2, the horn antenna direction of Tx is tilted at an angle range of -4 to -37 degrees from Tx to the roof of the house so that the Tx beam covers the measurement area where the receiving sensitivity of the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) to noise floor is more than 10 dB. The closer the Tx is to the house, the greater the tilt angle of the Tx antenna. The Tx horn antenna has a 15-degree beamwidth and a 21 dBi directional gain. The horn antenna of Rx is the same as the horn antenna of Tx. This is the reason that the pathloss of the mm-Wave band is large. To estimate a large pathloss, the path gain was obtained using a horn antenna with a large directional gain. With respect to antenna characteristics, the far-field antenna pattern and gain characteristics in the mm-Wave band were measured in the anechoic chamber.

In Figure 3, in the path of the over rooftop environment, Rx moved around the house or along the road in the whole measurement area and measured the channel impulse response at the location of the Rx measurement point. The over rooftop path environment refers to an outdoor environment where the transmitted signal passes above the roof of the house and is received at the Rx measurement point. However, due to the large entry loss of the house with a reinforced concrete structure in mm-Wave, this paper did not consider the penetration loss of house [2022]. When looking at Tx at the Rx position, the Tx site is visible or invisible. In this case, it means LoS or NLoS, respectively.

2.2. Hardware Channel Sounder for Measurement

We built a wideband measurement sounder that operates at the center frequency of 32.4 GHz and 500 MHz BW, capable of detecting multipath signals around an urban low-rise (small town in suburban) outdoor environment. Measured multipath signals have temporal or spatial variation characteristics.

For the performance of the measurement sounder, the measurement time resolution is 2 ns, depending on the occupied bandwidth of the system. The spatial dynamic range from which the received signal can be measured and recovered is approximately 150 dB to provide a sufficient margin for a noise floor of approximately -78 dBm/BW in the analysis.

The measurement sounder transmits the conducted power of 27 dBm/BW. It can be amplified by the directional antenna. The best antenna pair of Tx and Rx is selected by referring to the characteristics of the multipath signals around the small town.

In mm-Wave bands from 20 to 40 GHz, the gain of a commercial directional antenna is less than about 25 dBi.

As shown in Figure 4, the measurement sounder includes the following modules. Rx has the same structure except for the radio frequency (RF) module of Tx. (i)Antenna and radio frequency (antenna/RF) module, which up-converts the intermediate frequency (IF) signal to an RF signal of 32.4 GHz. The output port connects a directional antenna. The IF signal is received through the input port. The antenna and RF module are interconnected and can be separated(ii)Antenna/RF rotation module, which measures the multipath signals received from various angles by rotating the antenna/RF module(iii)A timing synchronization and signal processing module, which synchronizes the start time between Tx and Rx in units of timing, including baseband or IF signal processing capabilities(iv)Monitoring module, which provides input parameters for overall control and monitors the output signal and received signal characteristics of each module

3. Measurement and Results

3.1. Channel Impulse Response

Multipaths that result in intersymbol interference cause time dispersion as described in the channel impulse response (CIR). When the channel characteristics change over time, a time is required, and is the multipath delay. Let equivalent complex-envelop CIR in a time variant at RX be where are the amplitude, phase shift, and excess delay of the -th propagation path, respectively. means total multipath components of the transmitted signal arriving at Rx. Useful to discrete into delay profiles, each profile represents a multipath component. At time , each profile arrives at Rx with a different amplitude, goes through a different phase shift, and has a different excess delay. To derive the received signal strength intensity (RSSI) at Rx, it is assumed that the channel characteristic does not change with time. This means that multipath components of transmitted signals arriving at the same Rx location have the same time excess delay. Let equivalent complex-envelop CIR in the time invariant at RX be

3.2. Received Signal Strength Intensity

At any frequency band and Rx position, the RSSI of the transmission and reception distance is the received Rx power derived using the channel response characteristic of Eq. (2). The RSSI depends on the separated distance (Tx-Rx distance) between Tx and Rx. Generally, as the distance increases, the received power decreases. In particular, the higher the frequency is, the greater the path attenuation characteristics are. The link distance from Tx to Rx is one of the major problems facing the mm-Wave system. In this paper, we considered an important factor in evaluating the coverage performance of the mm-Wave system. The application range of the mm-Wave system is to determine how the magnitude of the received Rx power varies with the transmission and reception distances.

Here, , , , and are the received signal strength intensity, the Tx output power, the Tx and Rx antenna gain, and pathloss, respectively.

3.3. General Approach on Pathloss Prediction

In Eq. (3), the pathloss in [6] can be calculated theoretically by knowing the Tx output power, the Tx and Rx antenna gains, and the Rx receive power. However, the pathloss characteristics can be derived by Eq. (4) according to frequency, the separated distance between Tx and Rx, and the long-term fading (shadow fading) characteristics. In Eq. (4), the exponents of the coefficient according to each parameter should be able to be derived from the actual environmental measurement. where

: 3D distance between Tx and Rx (m)

: operating frequency (GHz)

: coefficient associated with the increase in pathloss with the distance

: coefficient associated with the offset value of pathloss with multiple frequencies

: coefficient associated with the increase in pathloss with multiple frequencies

: zero mean Gaussian random variable with a standard deviation (dB)

The international recommendation for pathloss estimates for short distances of up to 1 km is the standardization of ITU-R (ITU radio sector) P.1411 [6]. This prediction model of pathloss is based on the measured data, and it is possible to predict pathloss considering both LoS and NLoS in the rooftop environment.

To determine the probability distribution characteristics of the entire measurement area for pathloss, we derived the cumulative distribution function (CDF) to determine the relative differences in the path characteristics of LoS or NLoS or opened area. The CDF of a random variable represents the distribution of a random variable. The advantage of CDF is that it can be defined for all kinds of random variables (discrete, continuous, and mixed). The CDF of random variable is defined as

Let be the number of observed minimum pathloss values.

In general, let be a discrete random variable with the range such that . Here, we assume that the range is bound from below; i.e., is the smallest value in . If this is not the case, then approaches zero as rather than hitting zero. We see that the CDF is in the form of a staircase. In particular, note that the CDF starts at zero. Then, it jumps at each point in the range. The CDF is always a nondecreasing function; i.e., if , then . Finally, the CDF approaches 1 as becomes large. Note that the CDF completely describes the distribution of a discrete random variable.

3.4. Site-Specific Environments

As shown in Figures 5 and 6, we considered the different site-specific characteristics for a small town to evaluate and analyze pathloss with the distance in the over rooftop environment.

The figures show that the radio waves propagate through the path between Tx on the top floor of the house and Rx below the roof. Figure 5 shows the case where the houses are stuck together, and Figure 6 shows the small town environment where the houses are separated from each other as shown in Figure 1. As a numerical model for the over rooftop environment, the international recommendation ITU-R P.1411 related to loss estimation with regard to short distance is given on the basis of the GO mechanism and related in the Figure 5 case. However, there is no specific model for the over rooftop environments considering spaces and along roads between houses. If the house is far away, the arrival path of the radio should take into account the signal coming from the road at the Rx point, the signal coming from the inter-house space, and the signal coming from above the house as shown in Figure 6. However, existing models that take into account the environment in Figure 5 only consider signals passing over the roof of the house. This is because it assumes an infinite array of houses.

3.5. Measurement Results Based on a Site-Specific Environment

The site-specific environments in a small town are subdivided into both free space and three cases in a LoS or NLoS environment.

The routes of the signals passing above houses are divided into three paths when the adjacent houses are slightly apart as shown in Figure 6. The first is a route that travels around the corner along the road (Path ). The second is a path coming from inter-house space (Path ). The third is a route that passes over the house roof (Path ).

We conducted the measurement for the propagation of the over rooftop in the mm-Wave bands in an urban low-rise (suburban) environment. We found that the measurement results for the site-specific environment in Figure 6 were different with the existing prediction result of the GO basis for the site-specific environment in Figure 5. This reason is a difference in the arrangement and the length of houses. In Figure 5, the length of the house is finite, but the arrangement between houses is stuck together. On the other hand, the considered environment in Figure 6 includes an open-space area between houses and neighboring houses. As a result, the existing GO basis prediction results do not fully reflect the characteristics of various small town environments. Therefore, this paper proposes the novel prediction model that can improve the existing prediction models of pathloss. The following is about the measurement method.

In order to obtain the propagation characteristics according to the distance through measurement, the Rx measurement points were moved at multiple positions within the entire measurement area as shown in Figure 3. The measurement points are located along the road and are at the front, back, and side of the house. A high gain–received horn antenna was used for measurement. At each Rx measurement point, the Rx antenna module was rotated horizontally and vertically to measure multipath signals coming from various directions, such as reflection and diffraction around Rx. And the measured CIR data is collected at each Rx measurement position. Both the Tx and Rx horn antennas have the same vertical polarization. From the measured data, pathloss according to each distance to the measurement point from Tx was derived by Eq. (2) to Eq. (4). In order to derive a predictive model for three paths in the site-specific environment as shown in Figure 6, the measured data was compared to the opened area characteristic [23].

On measurement, Tx is installed on the roof at the height of 44 m and Rx is located on the height of 1.5 m above the ground level. Tx and Rx have a single-frequency mode with the same frequency of 32.4 GHz. The occupied bandwidth is 500 MHz. The maximum Tx output power is 27 dBm/BW. Tx and Rx antennas are of the same type of aperture horn with a directional gain of 21 dBi. The beamwidth of the horn antenna is 15 degrees. The small town includes a LoS or NLoS environment. The maximum 3D distance from the Tx site in the entire measurement area is less than 500 m. The minimum distance is less than 98 m.

The following shows the distribution of the measured data according to the distance for the three paths in the over rooftop of the house. The regression lines were drawn based on the measured data. Pathloss when the frequency is a single frequency can be expressed as Eq. (6) from Eq. (4). From the regression line, the coefficients (, ) of Eq. (6) can be derived. where

: 3D distance between Tx and Rx (m)

: coefficient associated with the increase in pathloss with the distance

: coefficient associated with the offset value of pathloss in single frequency

The first of three paths is a route that travels around the corner along the road (Path ). This path is divided into the path (the path before corner) from the Tx site to the corner and the path (the path after corner) from the corner to the Rx location. On the path before the corner, LoS and NLoS environments coexist in the path until the corner. Figure 7 shows the measured data and path characteristics according to the distance from the Tx site to the corner (the path before corner). The measured data was compared to the opened area characteristic. We show pathloss according to the distance by separating measurement points by LoS (Meas.LOS-Lrbc-road) or NLoS (Meas.NLOS-Lrbc-road) environment on the path. The regression lines in a LoS or NLoS environment were drawn based on the measured data. Table 1 shows the coefficients derived from the regression lines in Figure 7. The coefficients associated with pathloss are different depending on the LoS or NLoS environment. That is, in the case of the NLoS environment, the relative pathloss is greater than LoS, and the slope with respect to pathloss is also increased. The pathloss factor according to the distance seems larger than the opened area loss in case of LoS, and the relative pathloss in NLoS is about 27 dB larger than LoS.

Typical pathloss parameters estimated from all power profiles for an outdoor environment are given in Table 1. The probability values of 50% CDF for pathlosses at 32.4 GHz for the before-corner path in a small town are shown in Figure 8. For the outdoor environment, pathlosses are dependent on the opened area or LoS or NLoS environment as shown in results in Figure 8. On the route that travels before the corner along the road from the Tx site, median pathloss values of the opened area and LoS and NLoS environments are 110 dB, 113 dB, and 139 dB, respectively.

The second is a path coming from the inter-house space (Path ). On the inter-house space path, LoS and NLoS environments coexist on the path until Rx. Figure 9 shows the measured data and the path characteristics according to the distance when the transmitting signals pass through the inter-house space on the received path. The measured data was compared with the opened area characteristic. We show pathloss according to the distance by separating measurement points by a LoS (Meas.LOS-Lb-btHouse) or NLoS (Meas.NLOS-Lb-btHouse) environment on the path. The regression lines in LoS and NLoS environments were drawn based on the measured data, too.

Table 2 shows the coefficient of parameters derived from the regression lines in Figure 9. The coefficients associated with pathloss are different depending on the LoS or NLoS environment. That is, in the case of NLoS, the relative pathloss is greater than LoS, and the slope with respect to pathloss also increases similarly. The relative pathloss seems larger at 6 dB than the opened area loss in spite of the LoS environment, and the relative pathloss in NLoS is about 19 dB larger than that in LoS. Typical pathloss parameters estimated from all power profiles for an outdoor inter-house space environment are given in Table 2.

The probability values of 50% CDF for pathlosses for the between-house path are shown in Figure 10. Pathlosses are dependent on the opened area and LoS and NLoS environments as shown in results in Figure 9. On the path coming from the inter-house space, median pathloss values of the opened area and LoS and NLoS environments are 113 dB, 119 dB, and 138 dB, respectively.

The third is a route that passes over the house roof (Path ). On the path over the house roof, the path until Rx is the NLoS environment.

Figure 11 shows the measured data and path characteristics depending on the distance when transmitting signals pass over the house roof on the received path. The measured data was compared with the opened area and the inter-house space path characteristics. We show pathloss according to the distance by separating measurement points by the path of inter-house space (Meas.NLOS-Lb-btHouse) or the path over the house roof (Meas.NLOS-Lv-over House Roof) environment. The regression lines in two environments were also drawn based on the measured data.

Table 3 shows the coefficient of parameters derived from the regression lines in Figure 11. The coefficients associated with pathloss are different depending on the opened area or NLoS environment. That is, in the case of NLoS, the relative pathloss is greater than the opened area, and the slope with respect to pathloss also increases sharply. The relative pathloss seems larger 3 dB than the inter-house space loss, and the relative pathloss in NLoS is about 26 dB larger than the opened area.

Typical pathloss parameters estimated from all power profiles of the path over the house roof are given in Table 3. The probability values of 50% CDF for pathlosses for the over house roof path are shown in Figure 12. Pathlosses are dependent on the NLoS environment as shown in results in Figure 12. On the route that passes over the house roof, median pathloss values of NLoS environments are 139 dB.

4. Modeling Based on Measurement

4.1. Proposal of a Site-Specific Prediction Model

For the environment in Figure 5, the existing pathloss prediction model based on the GO is divided into three parts: the direct wave dominant region, the reflected wave dominant region, and the diffracted wave dominant region. This model can predict the loss including LoS and NLoS. However, due to the diversity of the site environment, it can be seen that the existing model has limitations that can be applied as predictive model in outdoor environments on the over rooftop paths related to the arrangement of infinite houses. Therefore, in this paper, we propose the novel pathloss model that can be analyzed and predicted according to the arrangement of houses. This proposed model is based on the measured data. Due to the variety of measurement environments, predictable and environmentally relevant parameters can be applied.

Figure 6 describes a propagation characteristic that predicts whole pathloss between Tx and Rx of the low house height. The proposed pathloss model based on measurement is divided into three parts for outdoor environment: pathloss along a road, pathloss between houses, and pathloss above the house roof. Applicable areas are both LoS and NLoS regions that include areas having two or more corners. The pathloss along a road () is dominant at a relatively nearby Tx where there are only a few corners and the pathloss between houses () becomes dominant as a distance between terminals increases. The above roof propagation pathloss () becomes dominant relatively far from Tx where increases by multiple shielding of the houses. This model is recommended for frequencies in the millimeter range around 30 GHz. The maximum distance between terminals is up to 500 m. The applicable road angle range is below 90 degrees.

The following Eq. (7) to Eq. (16) are the site-specific pathloss models based on measurement and proposed in the over rooftop in an urban low-rise (suburban) environment.

In a direct wave dominant region,

In a reflected wave dominant region,

In a diffracted wave dominant region,

The relevant parameters for this model are

: wavelength (m)

: 3D distance between Tx and Rx (m)

: coefficient associated with the increase in pathloss with the distance along a corner

: coefficient associated with the offset value of pathloss along a corner in single frequency

: coefficient associated with the increase in pathloss with the distance between houses

: coefficient associated with the offset value of pathloss between houses in single frequency

: coefficient associated with the increase in pathloss with the distance above the roof of a house

: coefficient associated with the offset value of pathloss above the roof of a house in single frequency

θ: road angle of the corner (degree)

: operating frequency (GHz)

: distance from Tx to a corner (m)

: distance from a corner to Rx (m)

R: visible 3D distance from Tx to a house (m)

: height of the nearest house from Rx in Tx direction (m)

: Rx antenna height (m)

a: distance between the nearest house from Tx and Rx (m)

b: distance between Rx and the nearest house from Rx (m)

The prediction error of the proposed model can be deduced from the difference between the predicted and measurement values of each measurement position in an actual measurement environment. The root mean square error (RMSE) value in a real suburban environment is presented as the estimation error of the proposed model. The estimation error of the proposed model depends on the pathloss along a road (), the pathloss between houses (), and the above roof of propagation pathloss (). As results shown in Table 4, the estimation error of the proposed model is less than 5 dB in the millimeter wave band.

The proposed site-specific predication model based on real environment measurement can be usefully applied in some of the open space between houses, which cannot be analyzed in the existing P.1411 prediction model. As an environment basis prediction model, it is possible to derive site-specific predication propagation characteristics according to the real environment considering building height, building width, building surface roughness, and different building materials. Also, in the case of the site-specific predication model using the GO basis simulation technique like the existing P.1411 model, there is a limitation in the portion of simulating the building characteristics for the real environment. The proposed model is able to overcome the limit of the existing simulation technique because it can predict the propagation characteristics of a simple and real environment by deriving the propagation characteristic index parameter (attenuation coefficient) based on the measurement. However, since the proposed model is based on actual measurement, it is necessary to derive the propagation loss index parameter based on the optimal measurement according to various environments. Also, it is required to build a measurement system for precise measurement.

4.2. Site-General Characteristics

For the situation where Tx is on the roof and Rx is below the roof, the proposed site-specific prediction model is based on the measurement which was performed at multiple Rx locations with the aim of collecting statistics on the coefficients of propagation. With this prediction model, it is possible to understand the realistic pathloss characteristic in three routes that pass over the house roof in small town. The pathloss is subdivided into individual loss model based on three different realistic paths: the path along a road, the path between houses, and the path above the house roof. On the other hand, the measurement-based site-general pathloss model shows the difference with the environment applied for the site-specific model that is divided by the specific environments based on buildings and the road. The site-general model is divided into LoS and NLoS environments according to visibility and is divided into the opened area, urban, suburban, residential, rural area, etc. The propagation pathloss model for calculating the cell coverage and the interference of a real communication system uses the site-general model. At the mm-Wave frequencies above about 30 GHz, the breakpoint distance far exceeds the expected maximum cell radius of 500 meters. The power distance attenuation factor is almost pathloss exponents of about 1.9 to 4.0. The site-general model was applied to the situation. ITU-R recommends a radio propagation characteristic model (Recommendation ITU-R P. 1411) that can be used from 300 MHz to 100 GHz for the short-range communication within 1 km. The recommendation provides a site-general propagation model for over rooftop propagation in the urban environment. Applied frequency and the application of the distance and environment are different according to visible (LoS) or invisible (NLoS) area. Figure 13 shows pathloss according to the distance from the Tx site to Rx by the measurement (Meas.LOS-Suburban) or the existing prediction model (P.1411 LOS-Urban) result for over rooftop paths in the LoS environment. Figure 14 shows pathloss according to the distance by the measurement (Meas.NLOS-Suburban) result or the existing prediction model (P.1411 NLOS-Urban) result for the over rooftop paths in the NLoS environment. The regression lines in LoS and NLoS environments were drawn based on the measurement data.

Table 5 shows the coefficients (, ) derived from the Figures 13 and 14.

The coefficients associated with pathloss are different depending on the LoS or NLoS environment. That is, in the case of NLoS, the relative pathloss is greater than LoS, and the slope with respect to pathloss also increases sharply. The pathloss factor according to the distance seems larger than the opened area loss in case of LoS, and relative pathloss in NLoS is about 23 dB larger than that in LoS. Experimental-based pathloss characteristics at 32.4 GHz bands for the over rooftop in a small town (a kind of suburban) were compared with the over rooftop in the urban environment of recommendation ITU-R P.1411 and results of the opened area characteristics at the same frequency bands. The experimental analysis is based on the fact that the pathloss model for the over rooftop in an urban low-rise (suburban) environment exists in the visible region and in the invisible region. Therefore, it is possible to identify the similarities with existing models in the visible region through the analysis of actual measurements and to present pathloss characteristics of the suburban environment in the invisible region as the basis for the measurement. It was judged to be available. As a result in Table 5, it is confirmed that the attenuation index () according to the distance in the visible region at 32.4 GHz bands for the over rooftop in a small town environment is 2.2, which is similar to the existing model with an attenuation coefficient of 2.3.

The attenuation index according to the distance in the invisible region is 3.5; it is less than 4.4 of the existing urban model of recommendation ITU-R P.1411. Typical pathloss parameters estimated from all power profiles of the path in the LoS and NLoS environment for the whole measurement area are given in Table 5. The probability values of 50% CDF for pathlosses at 32.4 GHz in small town are shown in Figure 15 in LoS and Figure 16 in NLoS, respectively. On the site-general characteristics in a small town of a suburban area, median pathloss values of the opened area, LoS, and NLoS environments are 111 dB, 112 dB, and 135 dB, respectively.

5. Conclusions

In this paper, we propose the measurement basis of the site-specific pathloss model for the over rooftop paths in a small town and also provide the site-general characteristics in the entire measurement area of a small town at the mm-Wave frequency bands. In the case of the over rooftop route, the propagation is transmitted from the Tx site to Rx in three paths according to the environment of the road and buildings in a small town. One is along the road path, the second is between houses, and the third is the roof path. In the case of the existing ITU-R pathloss model, only the site-specific model for the roof path out of various paths was considered, but there was a limit to reflect various small urban environments. In addition, although the site-general model is used as the propagation model for the system cell coverage calculation and frequency sharing between heterogeneous systems; there is no reliable suburban model in the mm-Wave bands. Therefore, the site-specific prediction model based on measurement and geometry that can reflect the characteristics of a small town in a suburban environment is proposed and the pathloss coefficient factor in the suburban environment is presented. These results can be very useful as a deterministic pathloss and clutter loss models in the elevation link for sharing research based on cell planning and frequency shortage according to the deployment of a cellular environment of future 5G service systems or the earth-space (satellite) link at millimeter wave bands.

Data Availability

The data used to support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon request.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by Institute for Information & Communications Technology Planning & Evaluation (IITP) grant funded by the Korean government (MSIT) (No. 2017-0-00066, “Development of time-space based spectrum engineering technology for the preemptive using of frequency”).