206 research outputs found
Achievable Rates of Multi-User Millimeter Wave Systems with Hybrid Precoding
Millimeter wave (mmWave) systems will likely employ large antenna arrays at
both the transmitters and receivers. A natural application of antenna arrays is
simultaneous transmission to multiple users, which requires multi-user
precoding at the transmitter. Hardware constraints, however, make it difficult
to apply conventional lower frequency MIMO precoding techniques at mmWave. This
paper proposes and analyzes a low complexity hybrid analog/digital beamforming
algorithm for downlink multi-user mmWave systems. Hybrid precoding involves a
combination of analog and digital processing that is motivated by the
requirement to reduce the power consumption of the complete radio frequency and
mixed signal hardware. The proposed algorithm configures hybrid precoders at
the transmitter and analog combiners at multiple receivers with a small
training and feedback overhead. For this algorithm, we derive a lower bound on
the achievable rate for the case of single-path channels, show its asymptotic
optimality at large numbers of antennas, and make useful insights for more
general cases. Simulation results show that the proposed algorithm offers
higher sum rates compared with analog-only beamforming, and approaches the
performance of the unconstrained digital precoding solutions.Comment: to be presented in IEEE ICC 2015 - Workshop on 5G & Beyond - Enabling
Technologies and Application
Codebook Based Hybrid Precoding for Millimeter Wave Multiuser Systems
In millimeter wave (mmWave) systems, antenna architecture limitations make it
difficult to apply conventional fully digital precoding techniques but call for
low cost analog radio-frequency (RF) and digital baseband hybrid precoding
methods. This paper investigates joint RF-baseband hybrid precoding for the
downlink of multiuser multi-antenna mmWave systems with a limited number of RF
chains. Two performance measures, maximizing the spectral efficiency and the
energy efficiency of the system, are considered. We propose a codebook based RF
precoding design and obtain the channel state information via a beam sweep
procedure. Via the codebook based design, the original system is transformed
into a virtual multiuser downlink system with the RF chain constraint.
Consequently, we are able to simplify the complicated hybrid precoding
optimization problems to joint codeword selection and precoder design (JWSPD)
problems. Then, we propose efficient methods to address the JWSPD problems and
jointly optimize the RF and baseband precoders under the two performance
measures. Finally, extensive numerical results are provided to validate the
effectiveness of the proposed hybrid precoders.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figures, to appear in Trans. on Signal Process, 201
A Genetic Algorithm-based Beamforming Approach for Delay-constrained Networks
In this paper, we study the performance of initial access beamforming schemes
in the cases with large but finite number of transmit antennas and users.
Particularly, we develop an efficient beamforming scheme using genetic
algorithms. Moreover, taking the millimeter wave communication characteristics
and different metrics into account, we investigate the effect of various
parameters such as number of antennas/receivers, beamforming resolution as well
as hardware impairments on the system performance. As shown, our proposed
algorithm is generic in the sense that it can be effectively applied with
different channel models, metrics and beamforming methods. Also, our results
indicate that the proposed scheme can reach (almost) the same end-to-end
throughput as the exhaustive search-based optimal approach with considerably
less implementation complexity
Multiuser Millimeter Wave Beamforming Strategies with Quantized and Statistical CSIT
To alleviate the high cost of hardware in mmWave systems, hybrid
analog/digital precoding is typically employed. In the conventional two-stage
feedback scheme, the analog beamformer is determined by beam search and
feedback to maximize the desired signal power of each user. The digital
precoder is designed based on quantization and feedback of effective channel to
mitigate multiuser interference. Alternatively, we propose a one-stage feedback
scheme which effectively reduces the complexity of the signalling and feedback
procedure. Specifically, the second-order channel statistics are leveraged to
design digital precoder for interference mitigation while all feedback overhead
is reserved for precise analog beamforming. Under a fixed total feedback
constraint, we investigate the conditions under which the one-stage feedback
scheme outperforms the conventional two-stage counterpart. Moreover, a rate
splitting (RS) transmission strategy is introduced to further tackle the
multiuser interference and enhance the rate performance. Consider (1) RS
precoded by the one-stage feedback scheme and (2) conventional transmission
strategy precoded by the two-stage scheme with the same first-stage feedback as
(1) and also certain amount of extra second-stage feedback. We show that (1)
can achieve a sum rate comparable to that of (2). Hence, RS enables remarkable
saving in the second-stage training and feedback overhead.Comment: submitted to TW
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