13 research outputs found
D 3. 3 Final performance results and consolidated view on the most promising multi -node/multi -antenna transmission technologies
This document provides the most recent updates on the technical contributions and research
challenges focused in WP3. Each Technology Component (TeC) has been evaluated
under possible uniform assessment framework of WP3 which is based on the simulation guidelines
of WP6. The performance assessment is supported by the simulation results which are in their
mature and stable state. An update on the Most Promising Technology Approaches (MPTAs)
and their associated TeCs is the main focus of this document. Based on the input of all the TeCs in WP3, a consolidated view of WP3 on the role of multinode/multi-antenna transmission
technologies in 5G systems has also been provided. This consolidated view is further
supported in this document by the presentation of the impact of MPTAs on METIS scenarios
and the addressed METIS goals.Aziz, D.; Baracca, P.; De Carvalho, E.; Fantini, R.; Rajatheva, N.; Popovski, P.; Sørensen, JH.... (2015). D 3. 3 Final performance results and consolidated view on the most promising multi -node/multi -antenna transmission technologies. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/7675
Interference Alignment and Cancellation in Wireless Communication Systems
The Shannon capacity of wireless networks has a fundamental importance for network information theory. This area has recently seen remarkable progress on a variety of problems including the capacity of interference networks, X networks, cellular networks, cooperative communication networks and cognitive radio networks. While each communication scenario has its own characteristics, a common reason of these recent developments is the new idea of interference alignment. The idea of interference alignment is to consolidate the interference into smaller dimensions of signal space at each receiver and use the remaining dimensions to transmit the desired signals without any interference. However, perfect alignment of interference requires certain assumptions, such as perfect channel state information at transmitter and receiver, perfect synchronization and feedback. Today’s wireless communication systems, on the other and, do not encounter such ideal conditions. In this thesis, we cover a breadth of topics of interference alignment and cancellation schemes in wireless communication systems such as multihop relay networks, multicell networks as well as cooperation and optimisation in such systems. Our main contributions in this thesis can be summarised as follows:
• We derive analytical expressions for an interference alignment scheme in a multihop relay network with imperfect channel state information, and investigate the impact of interference on such systems where interference could accumulate due to the misalignment at each hop.
• We also address the dimensionality problem in larger wireless communication systems such as multi-cellular systems. We propose precoding schemes based on maximising signal power over interference and noise. We show that these precoding vectors would dramatically improve the rates for multi-user cellular networks in both uplink and downlink, without requiring an excessive number of dimensions. Furthermore, we investigate how to improve the receivers which can mitigate interference more efficiently.
• We also propose partial cooperation in an interference alignment and cancellation scheme. This enables us to assess the merits of varying mixture of cooperative and non-cooperative users and the gains achievable while reducing the overhead of channel estimation. In addition to this, we analytically derive expressions for the additional interference caused by imperfect channel estimation in such cooperative systems. We also show the impact of imperfect channel estimation on cooperation gains.
• Furthermore, we propose jointly optimisation of interference alignment and cancellation for multi-user multi-cellular networks in both uplink and downlink. We find the optimum set of transceivers which minimise the mean square error at each base station. We demonstrate that optimised transceivers can outperform existing interference alignment and cancellation schemes.
• Finally, we consider power adaptation and user selection schemes. The simulation results indicate that user selection and power adaptation techniques based on estimated rates can improve the overall system performance significantly
Scaling up virtual MIMO systems
Multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems are a mature technology that has been incorporated
into current wireless broadband standards to improve the channel capacity and link
reliability. Nevertheless, due to the continuous increasing demand for wireless data traffic new
strategies are to be adopted. Very large MIMO antenna arrays represents a paradigm shift in
terms of theory and implementation, where the use of tens or hundreds of antennas provides
significant improvements in throughput and radiated energy efficiency compared to single antennas
setups. Since design constraints limit the number of usable antennas, virtual systems can
be seen as a promising technique due to their ability to mimic and exploit the gains of multi-antenna
systems by means of wireless cooperation. Considering these arguments, in this work,
energy efficient coding and network design for large virtual MIMO systems are presented.
Firstly, a cooperative virtual MIMO (V-MIMO) system that uses a large multi-antenna transmitter
and implements compress-and-forward (CF) relay cooperation is investigated. Since
constructing a reliable codebook is the most computationally complex task performed by the
relay nodes in CF cooperation, reduced complexity quantisation techniques are introduced. The
analysis is focused on the block error probability (BLER) and the computational complexity for
the uniform scalar quantiser (U-SQ) and the Lloyd-Max algorithm (LM-SQ). Numerical results
show that the LM-SQ is simpler to design and can achieve a BLER performance comparable to
the optimal vector quantiser. Furthermore, due to its low complexity, U-SQ could be consider
particularly suitable for very large wireless systems.
Even though very large MIMO systems enhance the spectral efficiency of wireless networks,
this comes at the expense of linearly increasing the power consumption due to the use of multiple
radio frequency chains to support the antennas. Thus, the energy efficiency and throughput
of the cooperative V-MIMO system are analysed and the impact of the imperfect channel state
information (CSI) on the system’s performance is studied. Finally, a power allocation algorithm
is implemented to reduce the total power consumption. Simulation results show that
wireless cooperation between users is more energy efficient than using a high modulation order
transmission and that the larger the number of transmit antennas the lower the impact of the
imperfect CSI on the system’s performance.
Finally, the application of cooperative systems is extended to wireless self-backhauling heterogeneous
networks, where the decode-and-forward (DF) protocol is employed to provide a
cost-effective and reliable backhaul. The associated trade-offs for a heterogeneous network
with inhomogeneous user distributions are investigated through the use of sleeping strategies.
Three different policies for switching-off base stations are considered: random, load-based and
greedy algorithms. The probability of coverage for the random and load-based sleeping policies
is derived. Moreover, an energy efficient base station deployment and operation approach
is presented. Numerical results show that the average number of base stations required to support
the traffic load at peak-time can be reduced by using the greedy algorithm for base station
deployment and that highly clustered networks exhibit a smaller average serving distance and
thus, a better probability of coverage
Cooperative Radio Communications for Green Smart Environments
The demand for mobile connectivity is continuously increasing, and by 2020 Mobile and Wireless Communications will serve not only very dense populations of mobile phones and nomadic computers, but also the expected multiplicity of devices and sensors located in machines, vehicles, health systems and city infrastructures. Future Mobile Networks are then faced with many new scenarios and use cases, which will load the networks with different data traffic patterns, in new or shared spectrum bands, creating new specific requirements. This book addresses both the techniques to model, analyse and optimise the radio links and transmission systems in such scenarios, together with the most advanced radio access, resource management and mobile networking technologies. This text summarises the work performed by more than 500 researchers from more than 120 institutions in Europe, America and Asia, from both academia and industries, within the framework of the COST IC1004 Action on "Cooperative Radio Communications for Green and Smart Environments". The book will have appeal to graduates and researchers in the Radio Communications area, and also to engineers working in the Wireless industry. Topics discussed in this book include: • Radio waves propagation phenomena in diverse urban, indoor, vehicular and body environments• Measurements, characterization, and modelling of radio channels beyond 4G networks• Key issues in Vehicle (V2X) communication• Wireless Body Area Networks, including specific Radio Channel Models for WBANs• Energy efficiency and resource management enhancements in Radio Access Networks• Definitions and models for the virtualised and cloud RAN architectures• Advances on feasible indoor localization and tracking techniques• Recent findings and innovations in antenna systems for communications• Physical Layer Network Coding for next generation wireless systems• Methods and techniques for MIMO Over the Air (OTA) testin
Cooperative Radio Communications for Green Smart Environments
The demand for mobile connectivity is continuously increasing, and by 2020 Mobile and Wireless Communications will serve not only very dense populations of mobile phones and nomadic computers, but also the expected multiplicity of devices and sensors located in machines, vehicles, health systems and city infrastructures. Future Mobile Networks are then faced with many new scenarios and use cases, which will load the networks with different data traffic patterns, in new or shared spectrum bands, creating new specific requirements. This book addresses both the techniques to model, analyse and optimise the radio links and transmission systems in such scenarios, together with the most advanced radio access, resource management and mobile networking technologies. This text summarises the work performed by more than 500 researchers from more than 120 institutions in Europe, America and Asia, from both academia and industries, within the framework of the COST IC1004 Action on "Cooperative Radio Communications for Green and Smart Environments". The book will have appeal to graduates and researchers in the Radio Communications area, and also to engineers working in the Wireless industry. Topics discussed in this book include: • Radio waves propagation phenomena in diverse urban, indoor, vehicular and body environments• Measurements, characterization, and modelling of radio channels beyond 4G networks• Key issues in Vehicle (V2X) communication• Wireless Body Area Networks, including specific Radio Channel Models for WBANs• Energy efficiency and resource management enhancements in Radio Access Networks• Definitions and models for the virtualised and cloud RAN architectures• Advances on feasible indoor localization and tracking techniques• Recent findings and innovations in antenna systems for communications• Physical Layer Network Coding for next generation wireless systems• Methods and techniques for MIMO Over the Air (OTA) testin
Novel feedback and signalling mechanisms for interference management and efficient modulation
In order to meet the ever-growing demand for mobile data, a number of different technologies
have been adopted by the fourth generation standardization bodies. These include multiple access
schemes such as spatial division multiple access (SDMA), and efficient modulation techniques
such as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM)-based modulation. The
specific objectives of this theses are to develop an effective feedback method for interference
management in smart antenna SDMA systems and to design an efficient OFDM-based modulation
technique, where an additional dimension is added to the conventional two-dimensional
modulation techniques such as quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM).
In SDMA time division duplex (TDD) systems, where channel reciprocity is maintained, uplink
(UL) channel sounding method is considered as one of the most promising feedback methods
due to its bandwidth and delay efficiency. Conventional channel sounding (CCS) only conveys
the channel state information (CSI) of each active user to the base station (BS). Due to
the limitation in system performance because of co-channel interference (CCI) from adjacent
cells in interference-limited scenarios, CSI is only a suboptimal metric for multiuser spatial
multiplexing optimization. The first major contribution of this theses is a novel interference
feedback method proposed to provide the BS with implicit knowledge about the interference
level received by each mobile station (MS). More specifically, it is proposed to weight the
conventional channel sounding pilots by the level of the experienced interference at the user’s
side. Interference-weighted channel sounding (IWCS) acts as a spectrally efficient feedback
technique that provides the BS with implicit knowledge about CCI experienced by each MS,
and significantly improves the downlink (DL) sum capacity for both greedy and fair scheduling
policies. For the sake of completeness, a novel procedure is developed to make the IWCS pilots
usable for UL optimization. It is proposed to divide the optimization metric obtained from the
IWCS pilots by the interference experienced at the BS’s antennas. The resultant new metric, the
channel gain divided by the multiplication of DL and UL interference, provides link-protection
awareness and is used to optimize both UL and DL. Using maximum capacity scheduling criterion,
the link-protection aware metric results in a gain in the median system sum capacity of
26.7% and 12.5% in DL and UL respectively compared to the case when conventional channel
sounding techniques are used. Moreover, heuristic algorithm has been proposed in order to
facilitate a practical optimization and to reduce the computational complexity.
The second major contribution of this theses is an innovative transmission approach, referred
to as subcarrier-index modulation (SIM), which is proposed to be integrated with OFDM. The
key idea of SIM is to employ the subcarrier-index to convey information to the receiver. Furthermore,
a closed-form analytical bit error ratio (BER) of SIM OFDM in Rayleigh channel
is derived. Simulation results show BER performance gain of 4 dB over 4-QAM OFDM for
both coded and uncoded data without power saving policy. Alternatively, power saving policy
maintains an average gain of 1 dB while only using half OFDM symbol transmit power
Towards an enhanced noncoherent massive MU-MIMO system
PhD ThesisMany multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) downlink transmission schemes assume
channel state information (CSI) is available at the receiver/transmitter. In
practice, knowledge of CSI is often obtained by using pilot symbols transmitted
periodically. However, for some systems, due to high mobility and the cost of
channel training and estimation, CSI acquisition is not always feasible. The problem
becomes even more difficult when many antennas are used in the system and
the channel is changing very rapidly before training is completed. Moreover, as
the number of transmit/receive antennas grows large, the number of pilot symbols,
system overheads, latency, and power consumption will grow proportionately
and thereby the system becomes increasingly complex. As an alternative, a noncoherent
system may be used wherein the transmitter/receiver does not need any
knowledge of the CSI to perform precoding or detection. This thesis focuses on
the design of a noncoherent downlink transmission system to jointly improve the
performance and achieve a simple low complexity transmission scheme in three
MIMO system scenarios: low rate differential spacetime block coding (STBC) in a
downlink multiuser (MU-MIMO) system; high rate differential algebraic STBC in
a downlink MU-MIMO system; and differential downlink transmission in a massive
MU-MIMO system. Three novel design methods for each of these systems are
proposed and analysed thoroughly.
For the MIMO system with a low rate noncoherent scheme, a differential STBC
MU-MIMO system with a downlink transmission scheme is considered. Specifically,
downlink precoding combined with differential modulation (DM) is used
to shift the complexity from the receivers to the transmitter. The block diagonalization
(BD) precoding scheme is used to cancel co-channel interference (CCI) in
addition to exploiting its advantage of enhancing diversity. Since the BD scheme
requires channel knowledge at the transmitter, the downlink spreading technique
along with DM is also proposed, which does not require channel knowledge neither
at the transmitter nor at the receivers. The orthogonal spreading (OS) scheme is
employed to have similar principle as code division multiple access (CDMA) multiplexing
scheme in order to eliminate the interference between users. As a STBC
scheme, the Alamouti code is used that can be encoded/decoded using DM thereby
eliminating the need for channel knowledge at the receiver. The proposed schemes
yield low complexity transceivers while providing good performance.
For the MIMO system with a high rate noncoherent scheme, a differential STBC
MU-MIMO system that operates at a high data rate is considered. In particular,
a full-rate full-diversity downlink algebraic transmission scheme combined with a
differential STBC systems is proposed. To achieve this, perfect algebraic space
time codes and Cayley differential (CD) transforms are employed. Since CSI is
not needed at the differential receiver, differential schemes are ideal for multiuser
systems to shift the complexity from the receivers to the transmitter, thus simplifying
user equipment. Furthermore, OS matrices are employed at the transmitter to
separate the data streams of different users and enable simple single user decoding.
In the OS scheme, the transmitter does not require any knowledge of the CSI to
separate the data streams of multiple users; this results in a system which does not
need CSI at either end. With this system, to limit the number of possible codewords,
a sphere decoder (SD) is used to decode the signals at the receiving end.
The proposed scheme yields low complexity transceivers while providing full-rate
full-diversity system with good performance.
Lastly, a differential downlink transmission scheme is proposed for a massive MIMO
system without explicit channel estimation. In particular, a downlink precoding
technique combined with a differential encoding scheme is used to simplify the
overall system complexity. A novel precoder is designed which, with a large number
of transmit antennas, can effectively precancel the multiple access interference
(MAI) for each user, thus enhancing the system performance. Maximising the worst
case signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) is adopted to optimise the precoder
for the users in which full power space profile (PSP) knowledge is available to
the base station (BS). Also, two suboptimal solutions based on the matched and the
orthogonality approach of PSP are provided to separate the data streams of multiple
users. The decision feedback differential detection (DFDD) technique is employed
to further improve the performance.
In summary, the proposed methods eliminate MAI, enhance system performance,
and achieve a simple low complexity system. Moreover, transmission overheads
are significantly reduced, the proposed methods avoid explicit channel estimation
at both ends.King Fahad Security Collage at the Ministry of Interior - Saudi Arabia
Near-capacity fixed-rate and rateless channel code constructions
Fixed-rate and rateless channel code constructions are designed for satisfying conflicting design tradeoffs, leading to codes that benefit from practical implementations, whilst offering a good bit error ratio (BER) and block error ratio (BLER) performance. More explicitly, two novel low-density parity-check code (LDPC) constructions are proposed; the first construction constitutes a family of quasi-cyclic protograph LDPC codes, which has a Vandermonde-like parity-check matrix (PCM). The second construction constitutes a specific class of protograph LDPC codes, which are termed as multilevel structured (MLS) LDPC codes. These codes possess a PCM construction that allows the coexistence of both pseudo-randomness as well as a structure requiring a reduced memory. More importantly, it is also demonstrated that these benefits accrue without any compromise in the attainable BER/BLER performance. We also present the novel concept of separating multiple users by means of user-specific channel codes, which is referred to as channel code division multiple access (CCDMA), and provide an example based on MLS LDPC codes. In particular, we circumvent the difficulty of having potentially high memory requirements, while ensuring that each user’s bits in the CCDMA system are equally protected. With regards to rateless channel coding, we propose a novel family of codes, which we refer to as reconfigurable rateless codes, that are capable of not only varying their code-rate but also to adaptively modify their encoding/decoding strategy according to the near-instantaneous channel conditions. We demonstrate that the proposed reconfigurable rateless codes are capable of shaping their own degree distribution according to the nearinstantaneous requirements imposed by the channel, but without any explicit channel knowledge at the transmitter. Additionally, a generalised transmit preprocessing aided closed-loop downlink multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) system is presented, in which both the channel coding components as well as the linear transmit precoder exploit the knowledge of the channel state information (CSI). More explicitly, we embed a rateless code in a MIMO transmit preprocessing scheme, in order to attain near-capacity performance across a wide range of channel signal-to-ratios (SNRs), rather than only at a specific SNR. The performance of our scheme is further enhanced with the aid of a technique, referred to as pilot symbol assisted rateless (PSAR) coding, whereby a predetermined fraction of pilot bits is appropriately interspersed with the original information bits at the channel coding stage, instead of multiplexing pilots at the modulation stage, as in classic pilot symbol assisted modulation (PSAM). We subsequently demonstrate that the PSAR code-aided transmit preprocessing scheme succeeds in gleaning more information from the inserted pilots than the classic PSAM technique, because the pilot bits are not only useful for sounding the channel at the receiver but also beneficial for significantly reducing the computational complexity of the rateless channel decoder