4,299 research outputs found
Hybrid Precoder and Combiner Design with Low Resolution Phase Shifters in mmWave MIMO Systems
Millimeter wave (mmWave) communications have been considered as a key
technology for next generation cellular systems and Wi-Fi networks because of
its advances in providing orders-of-magnitude wider bandwidth than current
wireless networks. Economical and energy efficient analog/digial hybrid
precoding and combining transceivers have been often proposed for mmWave
massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems to overcome the severe
propagation loss of mmWave channels. One major shortcoming of existing
solutions lies in the assumption of infinite or high-resolution phase shifters
(PSs) to realize the analog beamformers. However, low-resolution PSs are
typically adopted in practice to reduce the hardware cost and power
consumption. Motivated by this fact, in this paper, we investigate the
practical design of hybrid precoders and combiners with low-resolution PSs in
mmWave MIMO systems. In particular, we propose an iterative algorithm which
successively designs the low-resolution analog precoder and combiner pair for
each data stream, aiming at conditionally maximizing the spectral efficiency.
Then, the digital precoder and combiner are computed based on the obtained
effective baseband channel to further enhance the spectral efficiency. In an
effort to achieve an even more hardware-efficient large antenna array, we also
investigate the design of hybrid beamformers with one-bit resolution (binary)
PSs, and present a novel binary analog precoder and combiner optimization
algorithm with quadratic complexity in the number of antennas. The proposed
low-resolution hybrid beamforming design is further extended to multiuser MIMO
communication systems. Simulation results demonstrate the performance
advantages of the proposed algorithms compared to existing low-resolution
hybrid beamforming designs, particularly for the one-bit resolution PS
scenario
Massive MU-MIMO Downlink TDD Systems with Linear Precoding and Downlink Pilots
We consider a massive MU-MIMO downlink time-division duplex system where a
base station (BS) equipped with many antennas serves several single-antenna
users in the same time-frequency resource. We assume that the BS uses linear
precoding for the transmission. To reliably decode the signals transmitted from
the BS, each user should have an estimate of its channel. In this work, we
consider an efficient channel estimation scheme to acquire CSI at each user,
called beamforming training scheme. With the beamforming training scheme, the
BS precodes the pilot sequences and forwards to all users. Then, based on the
received pilots, each user uses minimum mean-square error channel estimation to
estimate the effective channel gains. The channel estimation overhead of this
scheme does not depend on the number of BS antennas, and is only proportional
to the number of users. We then derive a lower bound on the capacity for
maximum-ratio transmission and zero-forcing precoding techniques which enables
us to evaluate the spectral efficiency taking into account the spectral
efficiency loss associated with the transmission of the downlink pilots.
Comparing with previous work where each user uses only the statistical channel
properties to decode the transmitted signals, we see that the proposed
beamforming training scheme is preferable for moderate and low-mobility
environments.Comment: Allerton Conference on Communication, Control, and Computing,
Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, Oct. 201
Doubly Massive mmWave MIMO Systems: Using Very Large Antenna Arrays at Both Transmitter and Receiver
One of the key features of next generation wireless communication systems
will be the use of frequencies in the range 10-100GHz (aka mmWave band) in
densely populated indoor and outdoor scenarios. Due to the reduced wavelength,
antenna arrays with a large number of antennas can be packed in very small
volumes, making thus it possible to consider, at least in principle,
communication links wherein not only the base-station, but also the user
device, are equipped with very large antenna arrays. We denote this
configuration as a "doubly-massive" MIMO wireless link. This paper introduces
the concept of doubly massive MIMO systems at mmWave, showing that at mmWave
the fundamentals of the massive MIMO regime are completely different from what
happens at conventional sub-6 GHz cellular frequencies. It is shown for
instance that the multiplexing capabilities of the channel and its rank are no
longer ruled by the number of transmit and receive antennas, but rather by the
number of scattering clusters in the surrounding environment. The implications
of the doubly massive MIMO regime on the transceiver processing, on the system
energy efficiency and on the system throughput are also discussed.Comment: Accepted for presentation at 2016 IEEE GLOBECOM, Washington (DC),
USA, December 201
Generalized Spatial Modulation in Large-Scale Multiuser MIMO Systems
Generalized spatial modulation (GSM) uses transmit antenna elements but
fewer transmit radio frequency (RF) chains, . Spatial modulation (SM)
and spatial multiplexing are special cases of GSM with and
, respectively. In GSM, in addition to conveying information bits
through conventional modulation symbols (for example, QAM), the
indices of the active transmit antennas also convey information bits.
In this paper, we investigate {\em GSM for large-scale multiuser MIMO
communications on the uplink}. Our contributions in this paper include: ()
an average bit error probability (ABEP) analysis for maximum-likelihood
detection in multiuser GSM-MIMO on the uplink, where we derive an upper bound
on the ABEP, and () low-complexity algorithms for GSM-MIMO signal detection
and channel estimation at the base station receiver based on message passing.
The analytical upper bounds on the ABEP are found to be tight at moderate to
high signal-to-noise ratios (SNR). The proposed receiver algorithms are found
to scale very well in complexity while achieving near-optimal performance in
large dimensions. Simulation results show that, for the same spectral
efficiency, multiuser GSM-MIMO can outperform multiuser SM-MIMO as well as
conventional multiuser MIMO, by about 2 to 9 dB at a bit error rate of
. Such SNR gains in GSM-MIMO compared to SM-MIMO and conventional MIMO
can be attributed to the fact that, because of a larger number of spatial index
bits, GSM-MIMO can use a lower-order QAM alphabet which is more power
efficient.Comment: IEEE Trans. on Wireless Communications, accepte
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