4,602 research outputs found
Millimeter Wave Cellular Networks: A MAC Layer Perspective
The millimeter wave (mmWave) frequency band is seen as a key enabler of
multi-gigabit wireless access in future cellular networks. In order to overcome
the propagation challenges, mmWave systems use a large number of antenna
elements both at the base station and at the user equipment, which lead to high
directivity gains, fully-directional communications, and possible noise-limited
operations. The fundamental differences between mmWave networks and traditional
ones challenge the classical design constraints, objectives, and available
degrees of freedom. This paper addresses the implications that highly
directional communication has on the design of an efficient medium access
control (MAC) layer. The paper discusses key MAC layer issues, such as
synchronization, random access, handover, channelization, interference
management, scheduling, and association. The paper provides an integrated view
on MAC layer issues for cellular networks, identifies new challenges and
tradeoffs, and provides novel insights and solution approaches.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, to appear in IEEE Transactions on
Communication
Cellular Interference Alignment
Interference alignment promises that, in Gaussian interference channels, each
link can support half of a degree of freedom (DoF) per pair of transmit-receive
antennas. However, in general, this result requires to precode the data bearing
signals over a signal space of asymptotically large diversity, e.g., over an
infinite number of dimensions for time-frequency varying fading channels, or
over an infinite number of rationally independent signal levels, in the case of
time-frequency invariant channels. In this work we consider a wireless cellular
system scenario where the promised optimal DoFs are achieved with linear
precoding in one-shot (i.e., over a single time-frequency slot). We focus on
the uplink of a symmetric cellular system, where each cell is split into three
sectors with orthogonal intra-sector multiple access. In our model,
interference is "local", i.e., it is due to transmitters in neighboring cells
only. We consider a message-passing backhaul network architecture, in which
nearby sectors can exchange already decoded messages and propose an alignment
solution that can achieve the optimal DoFs. To avoid signaling schemes relying
on the strength of interference, we further introduce the notion of
\emph{topologically robust} schemes, which are able to guarantee a minimum rate
(or DoFs) irrespectively of the strength of the interfering links. Towards this
end, we design an alignment scheme which is topologically robust and still
achieves the same optimum DoFs
Rate-Splitting Robustness in Multi-Pair Massive MIMO Relay Systems
Relay systems improve both coverage and system capacity. Toward this direction, a full-duplex (FD) technology, being able to boost the spectral efficiency by transmitting and receiving simultaneously on the same frequency and time resources, is envisaged to play a key role in future networks. However, its benefits come at the expense of self-interference (SI) from their own transmit signal. At the same time, massive multiple-input massive multiple-output systems, bringing unconventionally many antennas, emerge as a promising technology with huge degrees-of-freedom. To this end, this paper considers a multi-pair decode-and-forward FD relay channel, where the relay station is deployed with a large number of antennas. Moreover, the rate-splitting (RS) transmission has recently been shown to provide significant performance benefits in various multi-user scenarios with imperfect channel state information at the transmitter (CSIT). Engaging the RS approach, we employ the deterministic equivalent analysis to derive the corresponding sum-rates in the presence of interferences. Initially, numerical results demonstrate the robustness of RS in half-duplex (HD) systems, since the achievable sum-rate increases without bound, i.e., it does not saturate at high signal-to-noise ratio. Next, we tackle the detrimental effect of SI in FD. In particular, and most importantly, not only FD outperforms HD, but also RS enables increasing the range of SI over which FD outperforms HD. Furthermore, increasing the number of relay station antennas, RS appears to be more efficacious due to imperfect CSIT, since SI decreases. Interestingly, increasing the number of users, the efficiency of RS worsens and its implementation becomes less favorable under these conditions. Finally, we verify that the proposed DEs, being accurate for a large number of relay station antennas, are tight approximations even for realistic system dimensions.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Co-Channel Interference Cancellation in OFDM Networks using Coordinated Symbol Repetition and Soft Decision MLE CCI Canceler
In this paper, a new scheme of downlink co-channel interference (CCI)
cancellation in OFDM cellular networks is introduced for users at the
cell-edge. Coordinated symbol transmission between base stations (BS) is
operated where the same symbol is transmitted from different BS on different
sub-carriers. At the mobile station (MS) receiver, we introduce a soft decision
maximum likelihood CCI canceler and a modified maximum ratio combining (M-MRC)
to obtain an estimate of the transmitted symbols. Weights used in the combining
method are derived from the channels coefficients between the cooperated BS and
the MS. Simulations show that the proposed scheme works well under
frequency-selective channels and frequency non-selective channels. A gain of 9
dB and 6 dB in SIR is obtained under multipath fading and flat-fading channels,
respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures, IEEE International Conference on Signal
Processing and Communications, 2007. ICSPC 200
Massive MIMO with Non-Ideal Arbitrary Arrays: Hardware Scaling Laws and Circuit-Aware Design
Massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems are cellular networks
where the base stations (BSs) are equipped with unconventionally many antennas,
deployed on co-located or distributed arrays. Huge spatial degrees-of-freedom
are achieved by coherent processing over these massive arrays, which provide
strong signal gains, resilience to imperfect channel knowledge, and low
interference. This comes at the price of more infrastructure; the hardware cost
and circuit power consumption scale linearly/affinely with the number of BS
antennas . Hence, the key to cost-efficient deployment of large arrays is
low-cost antenna branches with low circuit power, in contrast to today's
conventional expensive and power-hungry BS antenna branches. Such low-cost
transceivers are prone to hardware imperfections, but it has been conjectured
that the huge degrees-of-freedom would bring robustness to such imperfections.
We prove this claim for a generalized uplink system with multiplicative
phase-drifts, additive distortion noise, and noise amplification. Specifically,
we derive closed-form expressions for the user rates and a scaling law that
shows how fast the hardware imperfections can increase with while
maintaining high rates. The connection between this scaling law and the power
consumption of different transceiver circuits is rigorously exemplified. This
reveals that one can make the circuit power increase as , instead of
linearly, by careful circuit-aware system design.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Wireless
Communications, 16 pages, 8 figures. The results can be reproduced using the
following Matlab code: https://github.com/emilbjornson/hardware-scaling-law
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