CommRad: Context-Aware Sensing-Driven Millimeter-Wave Networks
Planning to Explore via Self-Supervised World Models
CommRad: Context-Aware Sensing-Driven Millimeter-Wave Networks

Ish Kumar Jain
ikjain@ucsd.edu
Suriyaa MM
smm223@ucsd.edu
Dinesh Bharadia
dineshb@ucsd.edu
Sensys 2024


Utilizing monostatic Radar and Bi-static Radio as multi-modal sensing
Millimeter-wave (mmWave) technology is pivotal for next-generation wireless networks, enabling high-data-rate and low-latency applications such as autonomous vehicles and XR streaming. However, maintaining directional mmWave links in dynamic mobile environments is challenging due to mobility-induced disruptions and blockage. While effective, the current 5G NR beam training methods incur significant overhead and scalability issues in multi-user scenarios. To address this, we introduce CommRad, a sensing-driven solution incorporating a radar sensor at the base station to track mobile users and maintain directional beams even under blockages. While radar provides high-resolution object tracking, it suffers from a fundamental challenge of lack of context, i.e., it cannot discern which objects in the environment represent active users, reflectors, or blockers. To obtain this contextual awareness, CommRad unites wireless sensing capabilities of bi-static radio communication with the mono-static radar sensor, allowing radios to provide initial context to radar sensors. Subsequently, the radar aids in user tracking and sustains mobile links even in obstructed scenarios, resulting in robust and high-throughput directional connections for all mobile users at all times. We evaluate this collaborative radar-radio framework using a 28 GHz mmWave testbed integrated with a radar sensor in various indoor and outdoor scenarios, demonstrating a 2.5x improvement in median throughput and an 8x improvement in 20th percentile throughput compared to a non-collaborative baseline.



Synchronized radar and radio platform
We built a synchronized 28 GHz Radio and 24 Ghz Radar platform controlled via an FPGA for a trigger-based synchronization.



This project won the Qualcomm Innovation Fellowship in 2022
Original award winning QIF poster outlining the original idea of CommRad in May 2022.



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