776 research outputs found
Waveforms for the Massive MIMO Downlink: Amplifier Efficiency, Distortion and Performance
In massive MIMO, most precoders result in downlink signals that suffer from
high PAR, independently of modulation order and whether single-carrier or OFDM
transmission is used. The high PAR lowers the power efficiency of the base
station amplifiers. To increase power efficiency, low-PAR precoders have been
proposed. In this article, we compare different transmission schemes for
massive MIMO in terms of the power consumed by the amplifiers. It is found that
(i) OFDM and single-carrier transmission have the same performance over a
hardened massive MIMO channel and (ii) when the higher amplifier power
efficiency of low-PAR precoding is taken into account, conventional and low-PAR
precoders lead to approximately the same power consumption. Since downlink
signals with low PAR allow for simpler and cheaper hardware, than signals with
high PAR, therefore, the results suggest that low-PAR precoding with either
single-carrier or OFDM transmission should be used in a massive MIMO base
station
Scalable and Energy-Efficient Millimeter Massive MIMO Architectures: Reflect-Array and Transmit-Array Antennas
Hybrid analog-digital architectures are considered as promising candidates
for implementing millimeter wave (mmWave) massive multiple-input
multiple-output (MIMO) systems since they enable a considerable reduction of
the required number of costly radio frequency (RF) chains by moving some of the
signal processing operations into the analog domain. However, the analog feed
network, comprising RF dividers, combiners, phase shifters, and line
connections, of hybrid MIMO architectures is not scalable due to its
prohibitively high power consumption for large numbers of transmit antennas.
Motivated by this limitation, in this paper, we study novel massive MIMO
architectures, namely reflect-array (RA) and transmit-array (TA) antennas. We
show that the precoders for RA and TA antennas have to meet different
constraints compared to those for conventional MIMO architectures. Taking these
constraints into account and exploiting the sparsity of mmWave channels, we
design an efficient precoder for RA and TA antennas based on the orthogonal
matching pursuit algorithm. Furthermore, in order to fairly compare the
performance of RA and TA antennas with conventional fully-digital and hybrid
MIMO architectures, we develop a unified power consumption model. Our
simulation results show that unlike conventional MIMO architectures, RA and TA
antennas are highly energy efficient and fully scalable in terms of the number
of transmit antennas.Comment: submitted to IEEE ICC 201
Hybrid MIMO Architectures for Millimeter Wave Communications: Phase Shifters or Switches?
Hybrid analog/digital MIMO architectures were recently proposed as an
alternative for fully-digitalprecoding in millimeter wave (mmWave) wireless
communication systems. This is motivated by the possible reduction in the
number of RF chains and analog-to-digital converters. In these architectures,
the analog processing network is usually based on variable phase shifters. In
this paper, we propose hybrid architectures based on switching networks to
reduce the complexity and the power consumption of the structures based on
phase shifters. We define a power consumption model and use it to evaluate the
energy efficiency of both structures. To estimate the complete MIMO channel, we
propose an open loop compressive channel estimation technique which is
independent of the hardware used in the analog processing stage. We analyze the
performance of the new estimation algorithm for hybrid architectures based on
phase shifters and switches. Using the estimated, we develop two algorithms for
the design of the hybrid combiner based on switches and analyze the achieved
spectral efficiency. Finally, we study the trade-offs between power
consumption, hardware complexity, and spectral efficiency for hybrid
architectures based on phase shifting networks and switching networks.
Numerical results show that architectures based on switches obtain equal or
better channel estimation performance to that obtained using phase shifters,
while reducing hardware complexity and power consumption. For equal power
consumption, all the hybrid architectures provide similar spectral
efficiencies.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Acces
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
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