740 research outputs found
Channel Hardening-Exploiting Message Passing (CHEMP) Receiver in Large-Scale MIMO Systems
In this paper, we propose a MIMO receiver algorithm that exploits {\em
channel hardening} that occurs in large MIMO channels. Channel hardening refers
to the phenomenon where the off-diagonal terms of the matrix
become increasingly weaker compared to the diagonal terms as the size of the
channel gain matrix increases. Specifically, we propose a message
passing detection (MPD) algorithm which works with the real-valued matched
filtered received vector (whose signal term becomes ,
where is the transmitted vector), and uses a Gaussian approximation
on the off-diagonal terms of the matrix. We also propose a
simple estimation scheme which directly obtains an estimate of (instead of an estimate of ), which is used as an effective
channel estimate in the MPD algorithm. We refer to this receiver as the {\em
channel hardening-exploiting message passing (CHEMP)} receiver. The proposed
CHEMP receiver achieves very good performance in large-scale MIMO systems
(e.g., in systems with 16 to 128 uplink users and 128 base station antennas).
For the considered large MIMO settings, the complexity of the proposed MPD
algorithm is almost the same as or less than that of the minimum mean square
error (MMSE) detection. This is because the MPD algorithm does not need a
matrix inversion. It also achieves a significantly better performance compared
to MMSE and other message passing detection algorithms using MMSE estimate of
. We also present a convergence analysis of the proposed MPD
algorithm. Further, we design optimized irregular low density parity check
(LDPC) codes specific to the considered large MIMO channel and the CHEMP
receiver through EXIT chart matching. The LDPC codes thus obtained achieve
improved coded bit error rate performance compared to off-the-shelf irregular
LDPC codes
Integer-Forcing Linear Receivers
Linear receivers are often used to reduce the implementation complexity of
multiple-antenna systems. In a traditional linear receiver architecture, the
receive antennas are used to separate out the codewords sent by each transmit
antenna, which can then be decoded individually. Although easy to implement,
this approach can be highly suboptimal when the channel matrix is near
singular. This paper develops a new linear receiver architecture that uses the
receive antennas to create an effective channel matrix with integer-valued
entries. Rather than attempting to recover transmitted codewords directly, the
decoder recovers integer combinations of the codewords according to the entries
of the effective channel matrix. The codewords are all generated using the same
linear code which guarantees that these integer combinations are themselves
codewords. Provided that the effective channel is full rank, these integer
combinations can then be digitally solved for the original codewords. This
paper focuses on the special case where there is no coding across transmit
antennas and no channel state information at the transmitter(s), which
corresponds either to a multi-user uplink scenario or to single-user V-BLAST
encoding. In this setting, the proposed integer-forcing linear receiver
significantly outperforms conventional linear architectures such as the
zero-forcing and linear MMSE receiver. In the high SNR regime, the proposed
receiver attains the optimal diversity-multiplexing tradeoff for the standard
MIMO channel with no coding across transmit antennas. It is further shown that
in an extended MIMO model with interference, the integer-forcing linear
receiver achieves the optimal generalized degrees-of-freedom.Comment: 40 pages, 16 figures, to appear in the IEEE Transactions on
Information Theor
Iterative decoding for MIMO channels via modified sphere decoding
In recent years, soft iterative decoding techniques have been shown to greatly improve the bit error rate performance of various communication systems. For multiantenna systems employing space-time codes, however, it is not clear what is the best way to obtain the soft information required of the iterative scheme with low complexity. In this paper, we propose a modification of the Fincke-Pohst (sphere decoding) algorithm to estimate the maximum a posteriori probability of the received symbol sequence. The new algorithm solves a nonlinear integer least squares problem and, over a wide range of rates and signal-to-noise ratios, has polynomial-time complexity. Performance of the algorithm, combined with convolutional, turbo, and low-density parity check codes, is demonstrated on several multiantenna channels. The results for systems that employ space-time modulation schemes seem to indicate that the best performing schemes are those that support the highest mutual information between the transmitted and received signals, rather than the best diversity gain
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