355 research outputs found
Joint Pilot Design and Uplink Power Allocation in Multi-Cell Massive MIMO Systems
This paper considers pilot design to mitigate pilot contamination and provide
good service for everyone in multi-cell Massive multiple input multiple output
(MIMO) systems. Instead of modeling the pilot design as a combinatorial
assignment problem, as in prior works, we express the pilot signals using a
pilot basis and treat the associated power coefficients as continuous
optimization variables. We compute a lower bound on the uplink capacity for
Rayleigh fading channels with maximum ratio detection that applies with
arbitrary pilot signals. We further formulate the max-min fairness problem
under power budget constraints, with the pilot signals and data powers as
optimization variables. Because this optimization problem is non-deterministic
polynomial-time hard due to signomial constraints, we then propose an algorithm
to obtain a local optimum with polynomial complexity. Our framework serves as a
benchmark for pilot design in scenarios with either ideal or non-ideal
hardware. Numerical results manifest that the proposed optimization algorithms
are close to the optimal solution obtained by exhaustive search for different
pilot assignments and the new pilot structure and optimization bring large
gains over the state-of-the-art suboptimal pilot design.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures. Accepted to publish at IEEE Transactions on
Wireless Communication
Asymptotic Analysis of Multicell Massive MIMO over Rician Fading Channels
This work considers the downlink of a multicell massive MIMO system in which
base stations (BSs) of antennas each communicate with
single-antenna user equipments randomly positioned in the coverage area. Within
this setting, we are interested in evaluating the sum rate of the system when
MRT and RZF are employed under the assumption that each intracell link forms a
MIMO Rician fading channel. The analysis is conducted assuming that and
grow large with a non-trivial ratio under the assumption that the data
transmission in each cell is affected by channel estimation errors, pilot
contamination, and an arbitrary large scale attenuation. Numerical results are
used to validate the asymptotic analysis in the finite system regime and to
evaluate the network performance under different settings. The asymptotic
results are also instrumental to get insights into the interplay among system
parameters.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, submitted to GLOBECOM16, Washington, DC USA.
arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1601.0702
Massive MIMO for Next Generation Wireless Systems
Multi-user Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) offers big advantages over
conventional point-to-point MIMO: it works with cheap single-antenna terminals,
a rich scattering environment is not required, and resource allocation is
simplified because every active terminal utilizes all of the time-frequency
bins. However, multi-user MIMO, as originally envisioned with roughly equal
numbers of service-antennas and terminals and frequency division duplex
operation, is not a scalable technology. Massive MIMO (also known as
"Large-Scale Antenna Systems", "Very Large MIMO", "Hyper MIMO", "Full-Dimension
MIMO" & "ARGOS") makes a clean break with current practice through the use of a
large excess of service-antennas over active terminals and time division duplex
operation. Extra antennas help by focusing energy into ever-smaller regions of
space to bring huge improvements in throughput and radiated energy efficiency.
Other benefits of massive MIMO include the extensive use of inexpensive
low-power components, reduced latency, simplification of the media access
control (MAC) layer, and robustness to intentional jamming. The anticipated
throughput depend on the propagation environment providing asymptotically
orthogonal channels to the terminals, but so far experiments have not disclosed
any limitations in this regard. While massive MIMO renders many traditional
research problems irrelevant, it uncovers entirely new problems that urgently
need attention: the challenge of making many low-cost low-precision components
that work effectively together, acquisition and synchronization for
newly-joined terminals, the exploitation of extra degrees of freedom provided
by the excess of service-antennas, reducing internal power consumption to
achieve total energy efficiency reductions, and finding new deployment
scenarios. This paper presents an overview of the massive MIMO concept and
contemporary research.Comment: Final manuscript, to appear in IEEE Communications Magazin
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