134 research outputs found
Pareto Characterization of the Multicell MIMO Performance Region With Simple Receivers
We study the performance region of a general multicell downlink scenario with
multiantenna transmitters, hardware impairments, and low-complexity receivers
that treat interference as noise. The Pareto boundary of this region describes
all efficient resource allocations, but is generally hard to compute. We
propose a novel explicit characterization that gives Pareto optimal transmit
strategies using a set of positive parameters---fewer than in prior work. We
also propose an implicit characterization that requires even fewer parameters
and guarantees to find the Pareto boundary for every choice of parameters, but
at the expense of solving quasi-convex optimization problems. The merits of the
two characterizations are illustrated for interference channels and ideal
network multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO).Comment: Published in IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 6 pages, 6
figure
Hardware Impairments in Large-scale MISO Systems: Energy Efficiency, Estimation, and Capacity Limits
The use of large-scale antenna arrays has the potential to bring substantial
improvements in energy efficiency and/or spectral efficiency to future wireless
systems, due to the greatly improved spatial beamforming resolution. Recent
asymptotic results show that by increasing the number of antennas one can
achieve a large array gain and at the same time naturally decorrelate the user
channels; thus, the available energy can be focused very accurately at the
intended destinations without causing much inter-user interference. Since these
results rely on asymptotics, it is important to investigate whether the
conventional system models are still reasonable in the asymptotic regimes. This
paper analyzes the fundamental limits of large-scale multiple-input
single-output (MISO) communication systems using a generalized system model
that accounts for transceiver hardware impairments. As opposed to the case of
ideal hardware, we show that these practical impairments create finite ceilings
on the estimation accuracy and capacity of large-scale MISO systems.
Surprisingly, the performance is only limited by the hardware at the
single-antenna user terminal, while the impact of impairments at the
large-scale array vanishes asymptotically. Furthermore, we show that an
arbitrarily high energy efficiency can be achieved by reducing the power while
increasing the number of antennas.Comment: Published at International Conference on Digital Signal Processing
(DSP 2013), 6 pages, 5 figure
An Overview of Massive MIMO Technology Components in METIS
As the standardization of full-dimension MIMO systems in the Third Generation Partnership Project progresses, the research community has started to explore the potential of very large arrays as an enabler technology for meeting the requirements of fifth generation systems. Indeed, in its final deliverable, the European 5G project METIS identifies massive MIMO as a key 5G enabler and proposes specific technology components that will allow the cost-efficient deployment of cellular systems taking advantage of hundreds of antennas at cellular base stations. These technology components include handling the inherent pilot-data resource allocation trade-off in a near optimal fashion, a novel random access scheme supporting a large number of users, coded channel state information for sparse channels in frequency-division duplexing systems, managing user grouping and multi-user beamforming, and a decentralized coordinated transceiver design. The aggregate effect of these components enables massive MIMO to contribute to the METIS objectives of delivering very high data rates and managing dense populations
Towards a Realistic Assessment of Multiple Antenna HCNs: Residual Additive Transceiver Hardware Impairments and Channel Aging
Given the critical dependence of broadcast channels by the accuracy of
channel state information at the transmitter (CSIT), we develop a general
downlink model with zero-forcing (ZF) precoding, applied in realistic
heterogeneous cellular systems with multiple antenna base stations (BSs).
Specifically, we take into consideration imperfect CSIT due to pilot
contamination, channel aging due to users relative movement, and unavoidable
residual additive transceiver hardware impairments (RATHIs). Assuming that the
BSs are Poisson distributed, the main contributions focus on the derivations of
the upper bound of the coverage probability and the achievable user rate for
this general model. We show that both the coverage probability and the user
rate are dependent on the imperfect CSIT and RATHIs. More concretely, we
quantify the resultant performance loss of the network due to these effects. We
depict that the uplink RATHIs have equal impact, but the downlink transmit BS
distortion has a greater impact than the receive hardware impairment of the
user. Thus, the transmit BS hardware should be of better quality than user's
receive hardware. Furthermore, we characterise both the coverage probability
and user rate in terms of the time variation of the channel. It is shown that
both of them decrease with increasing user mobility, but after a specific value
of the normalised Doppler shift, they increase again. Actually, the time
variation, following the Jakes autocorrelation function, mirrors this effect on
coverage probability and user rate. Finally, we consider space division
multiple access (SDMA), single user beamforming (SU-BF), and baseline
single-input single-output (SISO) transmission. A comparison among these
schemes reveals that the coverage by means of SU-BF outperforms SDMA in terms
of coverage.Comment: accepted in IEEE TV
Beamforming Designs and Performance Evaluations for Intelligent Reflecting Surface Enhanced Wireless Communication System with Hardware Impairments
Intelligent reflecting surface (IRS) can effectively control the wavefront of
the impinging signals, and has emerged as a promising way to improve the energy
and spectrum efficiency of wireless communication systems. Most existing
studies were conducted with an assumption that the hardware operations are
perfect without any impairment. However, both physical transceiver and IRS
suffer from non-negligible hardware impairments in practice, which will bring
some major challenges, e.g., increasing the difficulty and complexity of the
beamforming designs, and degrading the system performance. In this paper, by
taking hardware impairments into consideration, we make the transmit and
reflect beamforming designs and evaluate the system performance. First, we
utilize the linear minimum mean square error estimator to make the channel
estimations, and analyze the factors that affect estimation accuracy. Then, we
derive the optimal transmit beamforming vector, and propose a gradient descent
method-based algorithm to obtain a sub-optimal reflect beamforming solution.
Next, we analyze the asymptotic channel capacities by considering two types of
asymptotics with respect to the transmit power and the numbers of antennas and
reflecting elements. Finally, we analyze the power scaling law and the energy
efficiency. By comparing the performance of our proposed algorithm with the
upper bound on the performance of global optimal reflect beamforming solution,
the simulation results demonstrate that our proposed algorithm can offer an
outstanding performance with low computational complexity. The simulation
results also show that there is no need to cost a lot on expensive antennas to
achieve both high spectral efficiency and energy efficiency when the
communication system is assisted by an IRS and suffer from hardware
impairments.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2004.09804,
arXiv:2004.0976
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