1,141 research outputs found
Massive MIMO for Internet of Things (IoT) Connectivity
Massive MIMO is considered to be one of the key technologies in the emerging
5G systems, but also a concept applicable to other wireless systems. Exploiting
the large number of degrees of freedom (DoFs) of massive MIMO essential for
achieving high spectral efficiency, high data rates and extreme spatial
multiplexing of densely distributed users. On the one hand, the benefits of
applying massive MIMO for broadband communication are well known and there has
been a large body of research on designing communication schemes to support
high rates. On the other hand, using massive MIMO for Internet-of-Things (IoT)
is still a developing topic, as IoT connectivity has requirements and
constraints that are significantly different from the broadband connections. In
this paper we investigate the applicability of massive MIMO to IoT
connectivity. Specifically, we treat the two generic types of IoT connections
envisioned in 5G: massive machine-type communication (mMTC) and ultra-reliable
low-latency communication (URLLC). This paper fills this important gap by
identifying the opportunities and challenges in exploiting massive MIMO for IoT
connectivity. We provide insights into the trade-offs that emerge when massive
MIMO is applied to mMTC or URLLC and present a number of suitable communication
schemes. The discussion continues to the questions of network slicing of the
wireless resources and the use of massive MIMO to simultaneously support IoT
connections with very heterogeneous requirements. The main conclusion is that
massive MIMO can bring benefits to the scenarios with IoT connectivity, but it
requires tight integration of the physical-layer techniques with the protocol
design.Comment: Submitted for publicatio
Millimeter Wave MIMO Channel Estimation Based on Adaptive Compressed Sensing
Multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems are well suited for
millimeter-wave (mmWave) wireless communications where large antenna arrays can
be integrated in small form factors due to tiny wavelengths, thereby providing
high array gains while supporting spatial multiplexing, beamforming, or antenna
diversity. It has been shown that mmWave channels exhibit sparsity due to the
limited number of dominant propagation paths, thus compressed sensing
techniques can be leveraged to conduct channel estimation at mmWave
frequencies. This paper presents a novel approach of constructing beamforming
dictionary matrices for sparse channel estimation using the continuous basis
pursuit (CBP) concept, and proposes two novel low-complexity algorithms to
exploit channel sparsity for adaptively estimating multipath channel parameters
in mmWave channels. We verify the performance of the proposed CBP-based
beamforming dictionary and the two algorithms using a simulator built upon a
three-dimensional mmWave statistical spatial channel model, NYUSIM, that is
based on real-world propagation measurements. Simulation results show that the
CBP-based dictionary offers substantially higher estimation accuracy and
greater spectral efficiency than the grid-based counterpart introduced by
previous researchers, and the algorithms proposed here render better
performance but require less computational effort compared with existing
algorithms.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, in 2017 IEEE International Conference on
Communications Workshop (ICCW), Paris, May 201
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