11 research outputs found

    A Tutorial on Extremely Large-Scale MIMO for 6G: Fundamentals, Signal Processing, and Applications

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    Extremely large-scale multiple-input-multiple-output (XL-MIMO), which offers vast spatial degrees of freedom, has emerged as a potentially pivotal enabling technology for the sixth generation (6G) of wireless mobile networks. With its growing significance, both opportunities and challenges are concurrently manifesting. This paper presents a comprehensive survey of research on XL-MIMO wireless systems. In particular, we introduce four XL-MIMO hardware architectures: uniform linear array (ULA)-based XL-MIMO, uniform planar array (UPA)-based XL-MIMO utilizing either patch antennas or point antennas, and continuous aperture (CAP)-based XL-MIMO. We comprehensively analyze and discuss their characteristics and interrelationships. Following this, we examine exact and approximate near-field channel models for XL-MIMO. Given the distinct electromagnetic properties of near-field communications, we present a range of channel models to demonstrate the benefits of XL-MIMO. We further motivate and discuss low-complexity signal processing schemes to promote the practical implementation of XL-MIMO. Furthermore, we explore the interplay between XL-MIMO and other emergent 6G technologies. Finally, we outline several compelling research directions for future XL-MIMO wireless communication systems.Comment: 38 pages, 10 figure

    Compressive Sensing-Based Grant-Free Massive Access for 6G Massive Communication

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    The advent of the sixth-generation (6G) of wireless communications has given rise to the necessity to connect vast quantities of heterogeneous wireless devices, which requires advanced system capabilities far beyond existing network architectures. In particular, such massive communication has been recognized as a prime driver that can empower the 6G vision of future ubiquitous connectivity, supporting Internet of Human-Machine-Things for which massive access is critical. This paper surveys the most recent advances toward massive access in both academic and industry communities, focusing primarily on the promising compressive sensing-based grant-free massive access paradigm. We first specify the limitations of existing random access schemes and reveal that the practical implementation of massive communication relies on a dramatically different random access paradigm from the current ones mainly designed for human-centric communications. Then, a compressive sensing-based grant-free massive access roadmap is presented, where the evolutions from single-antenna to large-scale antenna array-based base stations, from single-station to cooperative massive multiple-input multiple-output systems, and from unsourced to sourced random access scenarios are detailed. Finally, we discuss the key challenges and open issues to shed light on the potential future research directions of grant-free massive access.Comment: Accepted by IEEE IoT Journa

    Técnicas de equalização iterativa para arquiteturas híbridas sub-conectadas na banda de ondas milimétricas

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    Mestrado em Engenharia Eletrónica e TelecomunicaçõesThe millimeter wave communications and the use of a massive number of antennas are two promising technologies that being combined allow to achieve the multi Gb/s required by future 5G wireless systems. As this type of systems has a high number of antennas it is impossible to use a fully digital architecture, due to hardware limitations. Therefore, the design of signal processing techniques for hybrid analog-digital architectures is a requirement. Depending on the structure of the analog part the hybrid analog-digital architectures may be fully connected or sub-connected. Although the fully connected hybrid architectures allow to connect all RF chains to any antenna element, they involve a high cost due to its structural and computational complexity. As such, the sub-connected hybrid architectures become more attractive, since either at the hardware level or from the computational point of view they are less demanding. In this dissertation, we propose a hybrid iterative block multiuser equalizer for sub-connected millimeter wave massive MIMO systems. The user terminal transceiver has low-complexity and as such employ a pure analog random precoder, with a single RF chain. For the base station, a sub-connected hybrid analog-digital equalizer is designed to remove the multiuser interference. The hybrid equalizer is optimized using the average bit-error-rate as a metric. Due to the coupling between the RF chains in the optimization problem the computation of the optimal solution is way too complex. To address this problem, we compute the analog part of the equalizer sequentially over the RF chains using a dictionary built from the array response vectors. The proposed sub-connected hybrid iterative multiuser equalizer is compared with a recently proposed fully connected hybrid analog-digital approach and with the fully digital architecture. The results show that the performance of the proposed scheme is close to the fully connected hybrid approach after just a few iterations.As comunicações na banda das ondas milimétricas e o uso massivo de antenas são duas tecnologias promissoras que, sendo combinadas permitem alcançar elevadas taxas de transmissão, na ordem dos multi Gb/s, exigidas pelos futuros sistemas sem fios da 5G. Como estes sistemas possuem um número elevado de antenas, torna-se impossível o uso de uma arquitetura totalmente digital devido às limitações de hardware. Desta forma, é necessário projetar técnicas de processamento de sinal para arquiteturas híbridas analógico-digitais. Dentro das arquiteturas híbridas, foram propostas duas formas de lidar com a parte analógica, que são, a forma totalmente conectada e a forma sub-conectada. Embora as arquiteturas híbridas totalmente conectadas permitam interligar todas as cadeias RF a qualquer elemento de antena, estas envolvem um elevado custo devido à sua complexidade estrutural e computacional. Assim sendo, as arquiteturas híbridas sub-conectadas tornam-se mais atraentes pois são menos exigentes do ponto de vista computacional, bem como ao nível do hardware. Nesta dissertação, é proposto um equalizador iterativo para um sistema com uma arquitetura hibrida sub-conectada, com múltiplos utilizadores e um número massivo de antenas a operar na banda das ondas milimétricas. Os terminais dos utilizadores têm baixa complexidade e utilizam pré-codificadores aleatórios analógicos puros, cada um com uma única cadeia RF. Para a estação base, projetou-se um equalizador híbrido analógico-digital de arquitectura sub-conectada, para remover a interferência multiutilizador. O equalizador híbrido é otimizado usando a taxa média de erro de bit como métrica. Devido ao acoplamento entre as cadeias de RF no problema de otimização, o cálculo das soluções ótimas possui elevada complexidade. Para ultrapassar este problema, calculou-se a parte analógica de cada cadeia de RF do equalizador de forma sequencial, usando um dicionário construído a partir da resposta do agregado de antenas. Compara-se o equalizador iterativo híbrido para sistemas multiutilizador de arquitectura sub-conectada proposto com uma abordagem híbrida analógica/digital totalmente conectada, recentemente proposta na literatura e com uma arquitetura totalmente digital. Os resultados mostram que o desempenho do esquema proposto aproximasse da abordagem híbrida totalmente conectada após apenas algumas iterações

    Efficient Resource Allocation and Spectrum Utilisation in Licensed Shared Access Systems

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    Intelligent Sensing and Learning for Advanced MIMO Communication Systems

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    1-D broadside-radiating leaky-wave antenna based on a numerically synthesized impedance surface

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    A newly-developed deterministic numerical technique for the automated design of metasurface antennas is applied here for the first time to the design of a 1-D printed Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA) for broadside radiation. The surface impedance synthesis process does not require any a priori knowledge on the impedance pattern, and starts from a mask constraint on the desired far-field and practical bounds on the unit cell impedance values. The designed reactance surface for broadside radiation exhibits a non conventional patterning; this highlights the merit of using an automated design process for a design well known to be challenging for analytical methods. The antenna is physically implemented with an array of metal strips with varying gap widths and simulation results show very good agreement with the predicted performance
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