248 research outputs found
Event-Driven Optimal Feedback Control for Multi-Antenna Beamforming
Transmit beamforming is a simple multi-antenna technique for increasing
throughput and the transmission range of a wireless communication system. The
required feedback of channel state information (CSI) can potentially result in
excessive overhead especially for high mobility or many antennas. This work
concerns efficient feedback for transmit beamforming and establishes a new
approach of controlling feedback for maximizing net throughput, defined as
throughput minus average feedback cost. The feedback controller using a
stationary policy turns CSI feedback on/off according to the system state that
comprises the channel state and transmit beamformer. Assuming channel isotropy
and Markovity, the controller's state reduces to two scalars. This allows the
optimal control policy to be efficiently computed using dynamic programming.
Consider the perfect feedback channel free of error, where each feedback
instant pays a fixed price. The corresponding optimal feedback control policy
is proved to be of the threshold type. This result holds regardless of whether
the controller's state space is discretized or continuous. Under the
threshold-type policy, feedback is performed whenever a state variable
indicating the accuracy of transmit CSI is below a threshold, which varies with
channel power. The practical finite-rate feedback channel is also considered.
The optimal policy for quantized feedback is proved to be also of the threshold
type. The effect of CSI quantization is shown to be equivalent to an increment
on the feedback price. Moreover, the increment is upper bounded by the expected
logarithm of one minus the quantization error. Finally, simulation shows that
feedback control increases net throughput of the conventional periodic feedback
by up to 0.5 bit/s/Hz without requiring additional bandwidth or antennas.Comment: 29 pages; submitted for publicatio
Indoor off-body wireless communication: static beamforming versus space-time coding
The performance of beamforming versus space-time coding using a body-worn textile antenna array is experimentally evaluated for an indoor environment, where a walking rescue worker transmits data in the 2.45 GHz ISM band, relying on a vertical textile four-antenna array integrated into his garment. The two transmission scenarios considered are static beamforming at low-elevation angles and space-time code based transmit diversity. Signals are received by a base station equipped with a horizontal array of four dipole antennas providing spatial receive diversity through maximum-ratio combining. Signal-to-noise ratios, bit error rate characteristics, and signal correlation properties are assessed for both off-body transmission scenarios. Without receiver diversity, the performance of space-time coding is generally better. In case of fourth-order receiver diversity, beamforming is superior in line-of-sight conditions. For non-line-of-sight propagation, the space-time codes perform better as soon as bit error rates are low enough for a reliable data link
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