245 research outputs found
Distributed Beamforming in Wireless Multiuser Relay-Interference Networks with Quantized Feedback
We study quantized beamforming in wireless amplify-and-forward
relay-interference networks with any number of transmitters, relays, and
receivers. We design the quantizer of the channel state information to minimize
the probability that at least one receiver incorrectly decodes its desired
symbol(s). Correspondingly, we introduce a generalized diversity measure that
encapsulates the conventional one as the first-order diversity. Additionally,
it incorporates the second-order diversity, which is concerned with the
transmitter power dependent logarithmic terms that appear in the error rate
expression. First, we show that, regardless of the quantizer and the amount of
feedback that is used, the relay-interference network suffers a second-order
diversity loss compared to interference-free networks. Then, two different
quantization schemes are studied: First, using a global quantizer, we show that
a simple relay selection scheme can achieve maximal diversity. Then, using the
localization method, we construct both fixed-length and variable-length local
(distributed) quantizers (fLQs and vLQs). Our fLQs achieve maximal first-order
diversity, whereas our vLQs achieve maximal diversity. Moreover, we show that
all the promised diversity and array gains can be obtained with arbitrarily low
feedback rates when the transmitter powers are sufficiently large. Finally, we
confirm our analytical findings through simulations.Comment: 41 pages, 14 figures, submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information
Theory, July 2010. This work was presented in part at IEEE Global
Communications Conference (GLOBECOM), Nov. 200
Downlink Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access with Limited Feedback
In this paper, we analyze downlink non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA)
networks with limited feedback. Our goal is to derive appropriate transmission
rates for rate adaptation and minimize outage probability of minimum rate for
the constant-rate data service, based on distributed channel feedback
information from receivers. We propose an efficient quantizer with
variable-length encoding that approaches the best performance of the case where
perfect channel state information is available everywhere. We prove that in the
typical application with two receivers, the losses in the minimum rate and
outage probability decay at least exponentially with the minimum feedback rate.
We analyze the diversity gain and provide a sufficient condition for the
quantizer to achieve the maximum diversity order. For NOMA with receivers
where , we solve the minimum rate maximization problem within an
accuracy of in time complexity of
, then, we apply the previously proposed
quantizers for to the case of . Numerical simulations are
presented to demonstrate the efficiency of our proposed quantizers and the
accuracy of the analytical results
The Necessity of Relay Selection
We determine necessary conditions on the structure of symbol error rate (SER)
optimal quantizers for limited feedback beamforming in wireless networks with
one transmitter-receiver pair and R parallel amplify-and-forward relays. We
call a quantizer codebook "small" if its cardinality is less than R, and
"large" otherwise. A "d-codebook" depends on the power constraints and can be
optimized accordingly, while an "i-codebook" remains fixed. It was previously
shown that any i-codebook that contains the single-relay selection (SRS)
codebook achieves the full-diversity order, R. We prove the following:
Every full-diversity i-codebook contains the SRS codebook, and thus is
necessarily large. In general, as the power constraints grow to infinity, the
limit of an optimal large d-codebook contains an SRS codebook, provided that it
exists. For small codebooks, the maximal diversity is equal to the codebook
cardinality. Every diversity-optimal small i-codebook is an orthogonal
multiple-relay selection (OMRS) codebook. Moreover, the limit of an optimal
small d-codebook is an OMRS codebook.
We observe that SRS is nothing but a special case of OMRS for codebooks with
cardinality equal to R. As a result, we call OMRS as "the universal necessary
condition" for codebook optimality. Finally, we confirm our analytical findings
through simulations.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figure
Movement-Efficient Sensor Deployment in Wireless Sensor Networks With Limited Communication Range.
We study a mobile wireless sensor network (MWSN) consisting of multiple
mobile sensors or robots. Three key factors in MWSNs, sensing quality, energy
consumption, and connectivity, have attracted plenty of attention, but the
interaction of these factors is not well studied. To take all the three factors
into consideration, we model the sensor deployment problem as a constrained
source coding problem. %, which can be applied to different coverage tasks,
such as area coverage, target coverage, and barrier coverage. Our goal is to
find an optimal sensor deployment (or relocation) to optimize the sensing
quality with a limited communication range and a specific network lifetime
constraint. We derive necessary conditions for the optimal sensor deployment in
both homogeneous and heterogeneous MWSNs. According to our derivation, some
sensors are idle in the optimal deployment of heterogeneous MWSNs. Using these
necessary conditions, we design both centralized and distributed algorithms to
provide a flexible and explicit trade-off between sensing uncertainty and
network lifetime. The proposed algorithms are successfully extended to more
applications, such as area coverage and target coverage, via properly selected
density functions. Simulation results show that our algorithms outperform the
existing relocation algorithms
Asynchronous Channel Training in Multi-Cell Massive MIMO
Pilot contamination has been regarded as the main bottleneck in time division
duplexing (TDD) multi-cell massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO)
systems. The pilot contamination problem cannot be addressed with large-scale
antenna arrays. We provide a novel asynchronous channel training scheme to
obtain precise channel matrices without the cooperation of base stations. The
scheme takes advantage of sampling diversity by inducing intentional timing
mismatch. Then, the linear minimum mean square error (LMMSE) estimator and the
zero-forcing (ZF) estimator are designed. Moreover, we derive the minimum
square error (MSE) upper bound of the ZF estimator. In addition, we propose the
equally-divided delay scheme which under certain conditions is the optimal
solution to minimize the MSE of the ZF estimator employing the identity matrix
as pilot matrix. We calculate the uplink achievable rate using maximum ratio
combining (MRC) to compare asynchronous and synchronous channel training
schemes. Finally, simulation results demonstrate that the asynchronous channel
estimation scheme can greatly reduce the harmful effect of pilot contamination
Movement-efficient Sensor Deployment in Wireless Sensor Networks
We study a mobile wireless sensor network (MWSN) consisting of multiple
mobile sensors or robots. Two key issues in MWSNs - energy consumption, which
is dominated by sensor movement, and sensing coverage - have attracted plenty
of attention, but the interaction of these issues is not well studied. To take
both sensing coverage and movement energy consumption into consideration, we
model the sensor deployment problem as a constrained source coding problem. %,
which can be applied to different coverage tasks, such as area coverage, target
coverage, and barrier coverage. Our goal is to find an optimal sensor
deployment to maximize the sensing coverage with specific energy constraints.
We derive necessary conditions to the optimal sensor deployment with (i) total
energy constraint and (ii) network lifetime constraint. Using these necessary
conditions, we design Lloyd-like algorithms to provide a trade-off between
sensing coverage and energy consumption. Simulation results show that our
algorithms outperform the existing relocation algorithms.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
Very Low-Rate Variable-Length Channel Quantization for Minimum Outage Probability
We identify a practical vector quantizer design problem where any
fixed-length quantizer (FLQ) yields non-zero distortion at any finite rate,
while there is a variable-length quantizer (VLQ) that can achieve zero
distortion with arbitrarily low rate. The problem arises in a
multiple-antenna fading channel where we would like to minimize the channel
outage probability by employing beamforming via quantized channel state
information at the transmitter (CSIT). It is well-known that in such a
scenario, finite-rate FLQs cannot achieve the full-CSIT (zero distortion)
outage performance. We construct VLQs that can achieve the full-CSIT
performance with finite rate. In particular, with denoting the power
constraint of the transmitter, we show that the necessary and sufficient VLQ
rate that guarantees the full-CSIT performance is . We also
discuss several extensions (e.g. to precoding) of this result
Maximum-rate Transmission with Improved Diversity Gain for Interference Networks
Interference alignment (IA) was shown effective for interference management
to improve transmission rate in terms of the degree of freedom (DoF) gain. On
the other hand, orthogonal space-time block codes (STBCs) were widely used in
point-to-point multi-antenna channels to enhance transmission reliability in
terms of the diversity gain. In this paper, we connect these two ideas, i.e.,
IA and space-time block coding, to improve the designs of alignment precoders
for multi-user networks. Specifically, we consider the use of Alamouti codes
for IA because of its rate-one transmission and achievability of full diversity
in point-to-point systems. The Alamouti codes protect the desired link by
introducing orthogonality between the two symbols in one Alamouti codeword, and
create alignment at the interfering receiver. We show that the proposed
alignment methods can maintain the maximum DoF gain and improve the ergodic
mutual information in the long-term regime, while increasing the diversity gain
to 2 in the short-term regime. The presented examples of interference networks
have two antennas at each node and include the two-user X channel, the
interferring multi-access channel (IMAC), and the interferring broadcast
channel (IBC).Comment: submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Theor
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