237 research outputs found
Two-Layered Superposition of Broadcast/Multicast and Unicast Signals in Multiuser OFDMA Systems
We study optimal delivery strategies of one common and independent
messages from a source to multiple users in wireless environments. In
particular, two-layered superposition of broadcast/multicast and unicast
signals is considered in a downlink multiuser OFDMA system. In the literature
and industry, the two-layer superposition is often considered as a pragmatic
approach to make a compromise between the simple but suboptimal orthogonal
multiplexing (OM) and the optimal but complex fully-layered non-orthogonal
multiplexing. In this work, we show that only two-layers are necessary to
achieve the maximum sum-rate when the common message has higher priority than
the individual unicast messages, and OM cannot be sum-rate optimal in
general. We develop an algorithm that finds the optimal power allocation over
the two-layers and across the OFDMA radio resources in static channels and a
class of fading channels. Two main use-cases are considered: i) Multicast and
unicast multiplexing when users with uplink capabilities request both
common and independent messages, and ii) broadcast and unicast multiplexing
when the common message targets receive-only devices and users with uplink
capabilities additionally request independent messages. Finally, we develop a
transceiver design for broadcast/multicast and unicast superposition
transmission based on LTE-A-Pro physical layer and show with numerical
evaluations in mobile environments with multipath propagation that the capacity
improvements can be translated into significant practical performance gains
compared to the orthogonal schemes in the 3GPP specifications. We also analyze
the impact of real channel estimation and show that significant gains in terms
of spectral efficiency or coverage area are still available even with
estimation errors and imperfect interference cancellation for the two-layered
superposition system
Rate Splitting for MIMO Wireless Networks: A Promising PHY-Layer Strategy for LTE Evolution
MIMO processing plays a central part towards the recent increase in spectral
and energy efficiencies of wireless networks. MIMO has grown beyond the
original point-to-point channel and nowadays refers to a diverse range of
centralized and distributed deployments. The fundamental bottleneck towards
enormous spectral and energy efficiency benefits in multiuser MIMO networks
lies in a huge demand for accurate channel state information at the transmitter
(CSIT). This has become increasingly difficult to satisfy due to the increasing
number of antennas and access points in next generation wireless networks
relying on dense heterogeneous networks and transmitters equipped with a large
number of antennas. CSIT inaccuracy results in a multi-user interference
problem that is the primary bottleneck of MIMO wireless networks. Looking
backward, the problem has been to strive to apply techniques designed for
perfect CSIT to scenarios with imperfect CSIT. In this paper, we depart from
this conventional approach and introduce the readers to a promising strategy
based on rate-splitting. Rate-splitting relies on the transmission of common
and private messages and is shown to provide significant benefits in terms of
spectral and energy efficiencies, reliability and CSI feedback overhead
reduction over conventional strategies used in LTE-A and exclusively relying on
private message transmissions. Open problems, impact on standard specifications
and operational challenges are also discussed.Comment: accepted to IEEE Communication Magazine, special issue on LTE
Evolutio
Rate-Splitting Multiple Access for 6G Networks: Ten Promising Scenarios and Applications
In the upcoming 6G era, multiple access (MA) will play an essential role in
achieving high throughput performances required in a wide range of wireless
applications. Since MA and interference management are closely related issues,
the conventional MA techniques are limited in that they cannot provide
near-optimal performance in universal interference regimes. Recently,
rate-splitting multiple access (RSMA) has been gaining much attention. RSMA
splits an individual message into two parts: a common part, decodable by every
user, and a private part, decodable only by the intended user. Each user first
decodes the common message and then decodes its private message by applying
successive interference cancellation (SIC). By doing so, RSMA not only embraces
the existing MA techniques as special cases but also provides significant
performance gains by efficiently mitigating inter-user interference in a broad
range of interference regimes. In this article, we first present the
theoretical foundation of RSMA. Subsequently, we put forth four key benefits of
RSMA: spectral efficiency, robustness, scalability, and flexibility. Upon this,
we describe how RSMA can enable ten promising scenarios and applications along
with future research directions to pave the way for 6G.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, submitted to IEEE Network Magazin
Massive MIMO Multicasting in Noncooperative Cellular Networks
We study the massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) multicast
transmission in cellular networks where each base station (BS) is equipped with
a large-scale antenna array and transmits a common message using a single
beamformer to multiple mobile users. We first show that when each BS knows the
perfect channel state information (CSI) of its own served users, the
asymptotically optimal beamformer at each BS is a linear combination of the
channel vectors of its multicast users. Moreover, the optimal combining
coefficients are obtained in closed form. Then we consider the imperfect CSI
scenario where the CSI is obtained through uplink channel estimation in
timedivision duplex systems. We propose a new pilot scheme that estimates the
composite channel which is a linear combination of the individual channels of
multicast users in each cell. This scheme is able to completely eliminate pilot
contamination. The pilot power control for optimizing the multicast beamformer
at each BS is also derived. Numerical results show that the asymptotic
performance of the proposed scheme is close to the ideal case with perfect CSI.
Simulation also verifies the effectiveness of the proposed scheme with finite
number of antennas at each BS.Comment: to appear in IEEE JSAC Special Issue on 5G Wireless Communication
System
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