1,164 research outputs found
Energy efficiency of mmWave massive MIMO precoding with low-resolution DACs
With the congestion of the sub-6 GHz spectrum, the interest in massive
multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems operating on millimeter wave
spectrum grows. In order to reduce the power consumption of such massive MIMO
systems, hybrid analog/digital transceivers and application of low-resolution
digital-to-analog/analog-to-digital converters have been recently proposed. In
this work, we investigate the energy efficiency of quantized hybrid
transmitters equipped with a fully/partially-connected phase-shifting network
composed of active/passive phase-shifters and compare it to that of quantized
digital precoders. We introduce a quantized single-user MIMO system model based
on an additive quantization noise approximation considering realistic power
consumption and loss models to evaluate the spectral and energy efficiencies of
the transmit precoding methods. Simulation results show that
partially-connected hybrid precoders can be more energy-efficient compared to
digital precoders, while fully-connected hybrid precoders exhibit poor energy
efficiency in general. Also, the topology of phase-shifting components offers
an energy-spectral efficiency trade-off: active phase-shifters provide higher
data rates, while passive phase-shifters maintain better energy efficiency.Comment: Published in IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processin
Performance evaluation of 5G millimeter-wave cellular access networks using a capacity-based network deployment tool
The next fifth generation (5G) of wireless communication networks comes with a set of new features to satisfy the demand of data-intensive applications: millimeter-wave frequencies, massive antenna arrays, beamforming, dense cells, and so forth. In this paper, we investigate the use of beamforming techniques through various architectures and evaluate the performance of 5G wireless access networks, using a capacity-based network deployment tool. This tool is proposed and applied to a realistic area in Ghent, Belgium, to simulate realistic 5G networks that respond to the instantaneous bit rate required by the active users. The results show that, with beamforming, 5G networks require almost 15% more base stations and 4 times less power to provide more capacity to the users and the same coverage performances, in comparison with the 4G reference network. Moreover, they are 3 times more energy efficient than the 4G network and the hybrid beamforming architecture appears to be a suitable architecture for beamforming to be considered when designing a 5G cellular network
Massive MIMO Performance - TDD Versus FDD: What Do Measurements Say?
Downlink beamforming in Massive MIMO either relies on uplink pilot
measurements - exploiting reciprocity and TDD operation, or on the use of a
predetermined grid of beams with user equipments reporting their preferred
beams, mostly in FDD operation. Massive MIMO in its originally conceived form
uses the first strategy, with uplink pilots, whereas there is currently
significant commercial interest in the second, grid-of-beams. It has been
analytically shown that in isotropic scattering (independent Rayleigh fading)
the first approach outperforms the second. Nevertheless there remains
controversy regarding their relative performance in practice. In this
contribution, the performances of these two strategies are compared using
measured channel data at 2.6 GHz.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications,
31/Mar/201
MmWave Massive MIMO Based Wireless Backhaul for 5G Ultra-Dense Network
Ultra-dense network (UDN) has been considered as a promising candidate for
future 5G network to meet the explosive data demand. To realize UDN, a
reliable, Gigahertz bandwidth, and cost-effective backhaul connecting
ultra-dense small-cell base stations (BSs) and macro-cell BS is prerequisite.
Millimeter-wave (mmWave) can provide the potential Gbps traffic for wireless
backhaul. Moreover, mmWave can be easily integrated with massive MIMO for the
improved link reliability. In this article, we discuss the feasibility of
mmWave massive MIMO based wireless backhaul for 5G UDN, and the benefits and
challenges are also addressed. Especially, we propose a digitally-controlled
phase-shifter network (DPSN) based hybrid precoding/combining scheme for mmWave
massive MIMO, whereby the low-rank property of mmWave massive MIMO channel
matrix is leveraged to reduce the required cost and complexity of transceiver
with a negligible performance loss. One key feature of the proposed scheme is
that the macro-cell BS can simultaneously support multiple small-cell BSs with
multiple streams for each smallcell BS, which is essentially different from
conventional hybrid precoding/combining schemes typically limited to
single-user MIMO with multiple streams or multi-user MIMO with single stream
for each user. Based on the proposed scheme, we further explore the fundamental
issues of developing mmWave massive MIMO for wireless backhaul, and the
associated challenges, insight, and prospect to enable the mmWave massive MIMO
based wireless backhaul for 5G UDN are discussed.Comment: This paper has been accepted by IEEE Wireless Communications
Magazine. This paper is related to 5G, ultra-dense network (UDN), millimeter
waves (mmWave) fronthaul/backhaul, massive MIMO, sparsity/low-rank property
of mmWave massive MIMO channels, sparse channel estimation, compressive
sensing (CS), hybrid digital/analog precoding/combining, and hybrid
beamforming. http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=730653
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