8 research outputs found

    Full-Duplex Wireless for 6G: Progress Brings New Opportunities and Challenges

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    The use of in-band full-duplex (FD) enables nodes to simultaneously transmit and receive on the same frequency band, which challenges the traditional assumption in wireless network design. The full-duplex capability enhances spectral efficiency and decreases latency, which are two key drivers pushing the performance expectations of next-generation mobile networks. In less than ten years, in-band FD has advanced from being demonstrated in research labs to being implemented in standards and products, presenting new opportunities to utilize its foundational concepts. Some of the most significant opportunities include using FD to enable wireless networks to sense the physical environment, integrate sensing and communication applications, develop integrated access and backhaul solutions, and work with smart signal propagation environments powered by reconfigurable intelligent surfaces. However, these new opportunities also come with new challenges for large-scale commercial deployment of FD technology, such as managing self-interference, combating cross-link interference in multi-cell networks, and coexistence of dynamic time division duplex, subband FD and FD networks.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures, accepted to an IEEE Journa

    A survey on hybrid beamforming techniques in 5G : architecture and system model perspectives

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    The increasing wireless data traffic demands have driven the need to explore suitable spectrum regions for meeting the projected requirements. In the light of this, millimeter wave (mmWave) communication has received considerable attention from the research community. Typically, in fifth generation (5G) wireless networks, mmWave massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communications is realized by the hybrid transceivers which combine high dimensional analog phase shifters and power amplifiers with lower-dimensional digital signal processing units. This hybrid beamforming design reduces the cost and power consumption which is aligned with an energy-efficient design vision of 5G. In this paper, we track the progress in hybrid beamforming for massive MIMO communications in the context of system models of the hybrid transceivers' structures, the digital and analog beamforming matrices with the possible antenna configuration scenarios and the hybrid beamforming in heterogeneous wireless networks. We extend the scope of the discussion by including resource management issues in hybrid beamforming. We explore the suitability of hybrid beamforming methods, both, existing and proposed till first quarter of 2017, and identify the exciting future challenges in this domain

    Millimeter Wave Hybrid Beamforming Systems

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    Practical interference mitigation for Wi-Fi systems

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    Wi-Fi's popularity is also its Achilles' heel since in the dense deployments of multiple Wi-Fi networks typical in urban environments, concurrent transmissions interfere. The advent of networked devices with multiple antennas allows new ways to improve Wi-Fi's performance: a host can align the phases of the signals either received at or transmitted from its antennas so as to either maximize the power of the signal of interest through beamforming or minimize the power of interference through nulling. Theory predicts that these techniques should enable concurrent transmissions by proximal sender-receiver pairs, thus improving capacity. Yet practical challenges remain. Hardware platform limitations can prevent precise measurement of the wireless channel, or limit the accuracy of beamforming and nulling. The interaction between nulling and Wi-Fi's OFDM modulation, which transmits tranches of a packet's bits on distinct subcarriers, is subtle and can sacrifice the capacity gain expected from nulling. And in deployments where Wi-Fi networks are independently administered, APs must efficiently share channel measurements and coordinate their transmissions to null effectively. In this thesis, I design and experimentally evaluate beamforming and nulling techniques for use in Wi-Fi networks that address the aforementioned practical challenges. My contributions include: - Cone of Silence (CoS): a system that allows a Wi-Fi AP equipped with a phased-array antenna but only a single 802.11g radio to mitigate interference from senders other than its intended one, thus boosting throughput; - Cooperative Power Allocation (COPA): a system that efficiently shares channel measurements and coordinates transmissions between independent APs, and cooperatively allocates power so as to render received power across OFDM subcarriers flat at each AP's receiver, thus boosting throughput; - Power Allocation for Distributed MIMO (PADM): a system that leverages intelligent power allocation to mitigate inter-stream interference in distributed MIMO wireless networks, thus boosting throughput

    Millimeter Wave Hybrid Beamforming Systems

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    The motivation for this thesis is the design of millimetre wave (mmWave) hybrid beamforming systems for supporting high user density. mmWave systems with hybrid digital-to-analogue beamforming (D-A BF) have the potential to fulfil 5G traffic demands. However, the capacity of mmWave systems is severely limited as each radio frequency (RF) transceiver chain in current sub-array mmWave base station (BS) architectures support only a particular user. Therefore, two new algorithms have been proposed for broadband mmWave systems. The algorithms operate on the principles of selection combining (SC) and principal component (PC). SC is a spatio-temporal hybrid D-A BF which has been designed to exploit multipath diversity, which is a characteristic feature of broadband propagation at mmWave. A novel low-complexity variant of SC, called low-complexity selection combining (LC-SC) has also been proposed for supporting high user density for such sub-array mm-Wave BS. mmWave lens-antenna systems are an emergent beamforming technology. They are novel because they eliminate the requirement of traditional analog beamformers. In this context, a low-complexity beam allocation (LBA) algorithm, proposed in an earlier research, has been applied to solve the challenging problem of maximizing sum data-rates in switched-beam mmWave systems. However, there are practical limitations, such as restrictions in the number of available RF chains at the BS, sensitivity to sidelobe interference and the beam generation techniques. Using generalized beam-patterns, the maximum sum data-rates achievable in switched-beam mmWave systems is compared to fixed-beam systems by applying LBA. Then, the impact on maximum sum data-rates of actual beam-patterns, obtained from a practical mmWave lens-antenna, which have higher and non-uniform sidelobes compared to the theoretical beams, is assessed. Non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) relay with hybrid digital-to-analog precoding (D-A P) as a promising solution for supporting high user densities in overloaded millimeter wave (mmWave) systems is investigated. To support high user densities in current mmWave hybrid D-A P systems, an idea based on exploiting the concept of NOMA relay to support 2K users per RF chain is proposed, where 2K M. To design the hybrid D-A P systems, the SC and PC algorithms are combined with NOMA relay to support significantly higher user densities. In future research, performance impairments in beamforming assistedmmWaveNOMA systems due to far-user's angle-of-departure (AoD) divergence with respect to the near-user is being investigated. This investigation is novel since most literature in NOMA considers both the near-user and far-user pairs static with respect to one another

    Distributed Massive MIMO in Millimetre Wave Communication

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    This thesis considers a distributed massive MIMO (D-MaMIMO) system for millimetre wave (mmWave) communication for an outdoor coverage area, as the wavelength of mmWave makes it easier and the free space path loss necessitates the use of relatively large distributed antenna arrays. We assume that the line-of-sight (LoS) links are available between the access points (APs) and user equipment (UEs). We have examined different AP arrangements to serve a given square area using the beamforming (BF) for a single user case. Furthermore, the zero-forcing (ZF) pre-coding is applied at a central processing unit (CPU) on the downlink to separate multiple users. We focus on these multi-user scenarios with varying numbers of APs to demonstrate the extent to which closely spaced users can be separated by ZF processing. We examine the determinant of the effective composite channel matrix to demonstrate the conditions under which the ZF problem may become ill-conditioned. We then show that nearly perfect separation is attainable, even when the UEs are only a few metres apart. Subsequently, an eigenvalue decomposition (EVD) based ZF is proposed to improve the performance of multi-antenna UEs. It has been observed that 3DBF has limited scope in circumstances when users are distributed horizontally, near to the same height as the APs and it is advantageous to employ non-square AP antenna arrays to maximize azimuth separation, especially for multi-user environments. The throughput per UE indicates how many users could be served effectively using the aforementioned schemes and AP arrangements for these multi-user cases. We further explore the significant issue of multipath propagation characteristics for mmWave communication and propose the novel distinction between the effective and the environmental K-factor for Ricean channels. A closed-form approximation for the effective K-factor is derived and corroborated by comparison with numerical results

    Multi-stage/hybrid BF under limited dynamic range for OFDM FD backhaul with MIMO SI nulling

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