1,098 research outputs found
Energy-Efficient Coordinated Multi-Cell Multigroup Multicast Beamforming with Antenna Selection
This paper studies energy-efficient coordinated beamforming in multi-cell
multi-user multigroup multicast multiple-input single-output systems. We aim at
maximizing the network energy efficiency by taking into account the fact that
some of the radio frequency chains can be switched off in order to save power.
We consider the antenna specific maximum power constraints to avoid non-linear
distortion in power amplifiers and user-specific quality of service (QoS)
constraints to guarantee a certain QoS levels. We first introduce binary
antenna selection variables and use the perspective formulation to model the
relation between them and the beamformers. Subsequently, we propose a new
formulation which reduces the feasible set of the continuous relaxation,
resulting in better performance compared to the original perspective
formulation based problem. However, the resulting optimization problem is a
mixed-Boolean non-convex fractional program, which is difficult to solve. We
follow the standard continuous relaxation of the binary antenna selection
variables, and then reformulate the problem such that it is amendable to
successive convex approximation. Thereby, solving the continuous relaxation
mostly results in near-binary solution. To recover the binary variables from
the continuous relaxation, we switch off all the antennas for which the
continuous values are smaller than a small threshold. Numerical results
illustrate the superior convergence result and significant achievable gains in
terms of energy efficiency with the proposed algorithm.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted to IEEE ICC 2017 - International
Workshop on 5G RAN Desig
Coordinated Multicasting with Opportunistic User Selection in Multicell Wireless Systems
Physical layer multicasting with opportunistic user selection (OUS) is
examined for multicell multi-antenna wireless systems. By adopting a two-layer
encoding scheme, a rate-adaptive channel code is applied in each fading block
to enable successful decoding by a chosen subset of users (which varies over
different blocks) and an application layer erasure code is employed across
multiple blocks to ensure that every user is able to recover the message after
decoding successfully in a sufficient number of blocks. The transmit signal and
code-rate in each block determine opportunistically the subset of users that
are able to successfully decode and can be chosen to maximize the long-term
multicast efficiency. The employment of OUS not only helps avoid
rate-limitations caused by the user with the worst channel, but also helps
coordinate interference among different cells and multicast groups. In this
work, efficient algorithms are proposed for the design of the transmit
covariance matrices, the physical layer code-rates, and the target user subsets
in each block. In the single group scenario, the system parameters are
determined by maximizing the group-rate, defined as the physical layer
code-rate times the fraction of users that can successfully decode in each
block. In the multi-group scenario, the system parameters are determined by
considering a group-rate balancing optimization problem, which is solved by a
successive convex approximation (SCA) approach. To further reduce the feedback
overhead, we also consider the case where only part of the users feed back
their channel vectors in each block and propose a design based on the balancing
of the expected group-rates. In addition to SCA, a sample average approximation
technique is also introduced to handle the probabilistic terms arising in this
problem. The effectiveness of the proposed schemes is demonstrated by computer
simulations.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Multicast Multigroup Precoding and User Scheduling for Frame-Based Satellite Communications
The present work focuses on the forward link of a broadband multibeam
satellite system that aggressively reuses the user link frequency resources.
Two fundamental practical challenges, namely the need to frame multiple users
per transmission and the per-antenna transmit power limitations, are addressed.
To this end, the so-called frame-based precoding problem is optimally solved
using the principles of physical layer multicasting to multiple co-channel
groups under per-antenna constraints. In this context, a novel optimization
problem that aims at maximizing the system sum rate under individual power
constraints is proposed. Added to that, the formulation is further extended to
include availability constraints. As a result, the high gains of the sum rate
optimal design are traded off to satisfy the stringent availability
requirements of satellite systems. Moreover, the throughput maximization with a
granular spectral efficiency versus SINR function, is formulated and solved.
Finally, a multicast-aware user scheduling policy, based on the channel state
information, is developed. Thus, substantial multiuser diversity gains are
gleaned. Numerical results over a realistic simulation environment exhibit as
much as 30% gains over conventional systems, even for 7 users per frame,
without modifying the framing structure of legacy communication standards.Comment: Accepted for publication to the IEEE Transactions on Wireless
Communications, 201
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