579 research outputs found
Opportunistic Scheduling and Beamforming for MIMO-SDMA Downlink Systems with Linear Combining
Opportunistic scheduling and beamforming schemes are proposed for multiuser
MIMO-SDMA downlink systems with linear combining in this work. Signals received
from all antennas of each mobile terminal (MT) are linearly combined to improve
the {\em effective} signal-to-noise-interference ratios (SINRs). By exploiting
limited feedback on the effective SINRs, the base station (BS) schedules
simultaneous data transmission on multiple beams to the MTs with the largest
effective SINRs. Utilizing the extreme value theory, we derive the asymptotic
system throughputs and scaling laws for the proposed scheduling and beamforming
schemes with different linear combining techniques. Computer simulations
confirm that the proposed schemes can substantially improve the system
throughput.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the 18th Annual IEEE International
Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC),
Athens, Greece, September 3 - 7, 200
Resource Allocation for Power Minimization in the Downlink of THP-based Spatial Multiplexing MIMO-OFDMA Systems
In this work, we deal with resource allocation in the downlink of spatial
multiplexing MIMO-OFDMA systems. In particular, we concentrate on the problem
of jointly optimizing the transmit and receive processing matrices, the channel
assignment and the power allocation with the objective of minimizing the total
power consumption while satisfying different quality-of-service requirements. A
layered architecture is used in which users are first partitioned in different
groups on the basis of their channel quality and then channel assignment and
transceiver design are sequentially addressed starting from the group of users
with most adverse channel conditions. The multi-user interference among users
belonging to different groups is removed at the base station using a
Tomlinson-Harashima pre-coder operating at user level. Numerical results are
used to highlight the effectiveness of the proposed solution and to make
comparisons with existing alternatives.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, IEEE Trans. Veh. Techno
Space Division Multiple Access with a Sum Feedback Rate Constraint
On a multi-antenna broadcast channel, simultaneous transmission to multiple
users by joint beamforming and scheduling is capable of achieving high
throughput, which grows double logarithmically with the number of users. The
sum rate for channel state information (CSI) feedback, however, increases
linearly with the number of users, reducing the effective uplink capacity. To
address this problem, a novel space division multiple access (SDMA) design is
proposed, where the sum feedback rate is upper-bounded by a constant. This
design consists of algorithms for CSI quantization, threshold based CSI
feedback, and joint beamforming and scheduling. The key feature of the proposed
approach is the use of feedback thresholds to select feedback users with large
channel gains and small CSI quantization errors such that the sum feedback rate
constraint is satisfied. Despite this constraint, the proposed SDMA design is
shown to achieve a sum capacity growth rate close to the optimal one. Moreover,
the feedback overflow probability for this design is found to decrease
exponentially with the difference between the allowable and the average sum
feedback rates. Numerical results show that the proposed SDMA design is capable
of attaining higher sum capacities than existing ones, even though the sum
feedback rate is bounded.Comment: 29 pages; submitted to IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Multiuser MIMO-OFDM for Next-Generation Wireless Systems
This overview portrays the 40-year evolution of orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) research. The amelioration of powerful multicarrier OFDM arrangements with multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems has numerous benefits, which are detailed in this treatise. We continue by highlighting the limitations of conventional detection and channel estimation techniques designed for multiuser MIMO OFDM systems in the so-called rank-deficient scenarios, where the number of users supported or the number of transmit antennas employed exceeds the number of receiver antennas. This is often encountered in practice, unless we limit the number of users granted access in the base station’s or radio port’s coverage area. Following a historical perspective on the associated design problems and their state-of-the-art solutions, the second half of this treatise details a range of classic multiuser detectors (MUDs) designed for MIMO-OFDM systems and characterizes their achievable performance. A further section aims for identifying novel cutting-edge genetic algorithm (GA)-aided detector solutions, which have found numerous applications in wireless communications in recent years. In an effort to stimulate the cross pollination of ideas across the machine learning, optimization, signal processing, and wireless communications research communities, we will review the broadly applicable principles of various GA-assisted optimization techniques, which were recently proposed also for employment inmultiuser MIMO OFDM. In order to stimulate new research, we demonstrate that the family of GA-aided MUDs is capable of achieving a near-optimum performance at the cost of a significantly lower computational complexity than that imposed by their optimum maximum-likelihood (ML) MUD aided counterparts. The paper is concluded by outlining a range of future research options that may find their way into next-generation wireless systems
Advances in Multi-User Scheduling and Turbo Equalization for Wireless MIMO Systems
Nach einer Einleitung behandelt Teil 2 Mehrbenutzer-Scheduling fĂĽr die
Abwärtsstrecke von drahtlosen MIMO Systemen mit einer Sendestation und
kanaladaptivem precoding: In jeder Zeit- oder Frequenzressource kann eine
andere Nutzergruppe gleichzeitig bedient werden, räumlich getrennt durch
unterschiedliche Antennengewichte. Nutzer mit korrelierten Kanälen sollten
nicht gleichzeitig bedient werden, da dies die räumliche Trennbarkeit
erschwert. Die Summenrate einer Nutzermenge hängt von den Antennengewichten
ab, die wiederum von der Nutzerauswahl abhängen. Zur Entkopplung des
Problems schlägt diese Arbeit Metriken vor basierend auf einer geschätzten
Rate mit ZF precoding. Diese lässt sich mit Hilfe von wiederholten
orthogonalen Projektionen abschätzen, wodurch die Berechnung von
Antennengewichten beim Scheduling entfällt. Die Ratenschätzung kann
basierend auf momentanen Kanalmessungen oder auf gemittelter Kanalkenntnis
berechnet werden und es können Datenraten- und Fairness-Kriterien
berĂĽcksichtig werden. Effiziente Suchalgorithmen werden vorgestellt, die
die gesamte Systembandbreite auf einmal bearbeiten können und zur
Komplexitätsreduktion die Lösung in Zeit- und Frequenz nachführen können.
Teil 3 zeigt wie mehrere Sendestationen koordiniertes Scheduling und
kooperative Signalverarbeitung einsetzen können. Mittels orthogonalen
Projektionen ist es möglich, Inter-Site Interferenz zu schätzen, ohne
Antennengewichte berechnen zu mĂĽssen. Durch ein Konzept virtueller Nutzer
kann der obige Scheduling-Ansatz auf mehrere Sendestationen und sogar
Relays mit SDMA erweitert werden. Auf den benötigten Signalisierungsaufwand
wird kurz eingegangen und eine Methode zur Schätzung der Summenrate eines
Systems ohne Koordination besprochen. Teil4 entwickelt Optimierungen fĂĽr
Turbo Entzerrer. Diese Nutzen Signalkorrelation als Quelle von Redundanz.
Trotzdem kann eine Kombination mit MIMO precoding sinnvoll sein, da bei
Annahme realistischer Fehler in der Kanalkenntnis am Sender keine optimale
Interferenzunterdrückung möglich ist. Mit Hilfe von EXIT Charts wird eine
neuartige Methode zur adaptiven Nutzung von a-priori-Information zwischen
Iterationen entwickelt, die die Konvergenz verbessert. Dabei wird gezeigt,
wie man semi-blinde Kanalschätzung im EXIT chart berücksichtigen kann.
In Computersimulationen werden alle Verfahren basierend auf
4G-Systemparametern ĂĽberprĂĽft.After an introduction, part 2 of this thesis deals with downlink multi-user
scheduling for wireless MIMO systems with one transmitting station
performing channel adaptive precoding:Different user subsets can be served
in each time or frequency resource by separating them in space with
different antenna weight vectors. Users with correlated channel matrices
should not be served jointly since correlation impairs the spatial
separability.The resulting sum rate for each user subset depends on the
precoding weights, which in turn depend on the user subset. This thesis
manages to decouple this problem by proposing a scheduling metric based on
the rate with ZF precoding such as BD, written with the help of orthogonal
projection matrices. It allows estimating rates without computing any
antenna weights by using a repeated projection approximation.This rate
estimate allows considering user rate requirements and fairness criteria
and can work with either instantaneous or long term averaged channel
knowledge.Search algorithms are presented to efficiently solve user
grouping or selection problems jointly for the entire system bandwidth
while being able to track the solution in time and frequency for complexity
reduction.
Part 3 shows how multiple transmitting stations can benefit from
cooperative scheduling or joint signal processing. An orthogonal projection
based estimate of the inter-site interference power, again without
computing any antenna weights, and a virtual user concept extends the
scheduling approach to cooperative base stations and finally included SDMA
half-duplex relays in the scheduling.Signalling overhead is discussed and a
method to estimate the sum rate without coordination.
Part 4 presents optimizations for Turbo Equalizers. There, correlation
between user signals can be exploited as a source of redundancy.
Nevertheless a combination with transmit precoding which aims at reducing
correlation can be beneficial when the channel knowledge at the transmitter
contains a realistic error, leading to increased correlation. A novel
method for adaptive re-use of a-priori information between is developed to
increase convergence by tracking the iterations online with EXIT charts.A
method is proposed to model semi-blind channel estimation updates in an
EXIT chart.
Computer simulations with 4G system parameters illustrate the methods using realistic channel models.Im Buchhandel erhältlich:
Advances in Multi-User Scheduling and Turbo Equalization for Wireless MIMO Systems / Fuchs-Lautensack,Martin
Ilmenau: ISLE, 2009,116 S.
ISBN 978-3-938843-43-
Interference-Mitigating Waveform Design for Next-Generation Wireless Systems
A brief historical perspective of the evolution of waveform designs employed in consecutive generations of wireless communications systems is provided, highlighting the range of often conflicting demands on the various waveform characteristics. As the culmination of recent advances in the field the underlying benefits of various Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) schemes are highlighted and exemplified. As an integral part of the appropriate waveform design, cognizance is given to the particular choice of the duplexing scheme used for supporting full-duplex communications and it is demonstrated that Time Division Duplexing (TDD) is substantially outperformed by Frequency Division Duplexing (FDD), unless the TDD scheme is combined with further sophisticated scheduling, MIMOs and/or adaptive modulation/coding. It is also argued that the specific choice of the Direct-Sequence (DS) spreading codes invoked in DS-CDMA predetermines the properties of the system. It is demonstrated that a specifically designed family of spreading codes exhibits a so-called interference-free window (IFW) and hence the resultant system is capable of outperforming its standardised counterpart employing classic Orthogonal Variable Spreading Factor (OVSF) codes under realistic dispersive channel conditions, provided that the interfering multi-user and multipath components arrive within this IFW. This condition may be ensured with the aid of quasisynchronous adaptive timing advance control. However, a limitation of the system is that the number of spreading codes exhibiting a certain IFW is limited, although this problem may be mitigated with the aid of novel code design principles, employing a combination of several spreading sequences in the time-frequency and spatial-domain. The paper is concluded by quantifying the achievable user load of a UTRA-like TDD Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) system employing Loosely Synchronized (LS) spreading codes exhibiting an IFW in comparison to that of its counterpart using OVSF codes. Both system's performance is enhanced using beamforming MIMOs
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