13 research outputs found

    Enabling Efficient Communications Over Millimeter Wave Massive MIMO Channels Using Hybrid Beamforming

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    The use of massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) over millimeter wave (mmWave) channels is the new frontier for fulfilling the exigent requirements of next-generation wireless systems and solving the wireless network impending crunch. Massive MIMO systems and mmWave channels offer larger numbers of antennas, higher carrier frequencies, and wider signaling bandwidths. Unleashing the full potentials of these tremendous degrees of freedom (dimensions) hinges on the practical deployment of those technologies. Hybrid analog and digital beamforming is considered as a stepping-stone to the practical deployment of mmWave massive MIMO systems since it significantly reduces their operating and implementation costs, energy consumption, and system design complexity. The prevalence of adopting mmWave and massive MIMO technologies in next-generation wireless systems necessitates developing agile and cost-efficient hybrid beamforming solutions that match the various use-cases of these systems. In this thesis, we propose hybrid precoding and combining solutions that are tailored to the needs of these specific cases and account for the main limitations of hybrid processing. The proposed solutions leverage the sparsity and spatial correlation of mmWave massive MIMO channels to reduce the feedback overhead and computational complexity of hybrid processing. Real-time use-cases of next-generation wireless communication, including connected cars, virtual-reality/augmented-reality, and high definition video transmission, require high-capacity and low-latency wireless transmission. On the physical layer level, this entails adopting near capacity-achieving transmission schemes with very low computational delay. Motivated by this, we propose low-complexity hybrid precoding and combining schemes for massive MIMO systems with partially and fully-connected antenna array structures. Leveraging the disparity in the dimensionality of the analog and the digital processing matrices, we develop a two-stage channel diagonalization design approach in order to reduce the computational complexity of the hybrid precoding and combining while maintaining high spectral efficiency. Particularly, the analog processing stage is designed to maximize the antenna array gain in order to avoid performing computationally intensive operations such as matrix inversion and singular value decomposition in high dimensions. On the other hand, the low-dimensional digital processing stage is designed to maximize the spectral efficiency of the systems. Computational complexity analysis shows that the proposed schemes offer significant savings compared to prior works where asymptotic computational complexity reductions ranging between 80%80\% and 98%98\%. Simulation results validate that the spectral efficiency of the proposed schemes is near-optimal where in certain scenarios the signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) gap to the optimal fully-digital spectral efficiency is less than 11 dB. On the other hand, integrating mmWave and massive MIMO into the cellular use-cases requires adopting hybrid beamforming schemes that utilize limited channel state information at the transmitter (CSIT) in order to adapt the transmitted signals to the current channel. This is so mainly because obtaining perfect CSIT in frequency division duplexing (FDD) architecture, which dominates the cellular systems, poses serious concerns due to its large training and excessive feedback overhead. Motivated by this, we develop low-overhead hybrid precoding algorithms for selecting the baseband digital and radio frequency (RF) analog precoders from statistically skewed DFT-based codebooks. The proposed algorithms aim at maximizing the spectral efficiency based on minimizing the chordal distance between the optimal unconstrained precoder and the hybrid beamformer and maximizing the signal to interference noise ratio for the single-user and multi-user cases, respectively. Mathematical analysis shows that the proposed algorithms are asymptotically optimal as the number of transmit antennas goes to infinity and the mmWave channel has a limited number of paths. Moreover, it shows that the performance gap between the lower and upper bounds depends heavily on how many DFT columns are aligned to the largest eigenvectors of the transmit antenna array response of the mmWave channel or equivalently the transmit channel covariance matrix when only the statistical channel knowledge is available at the transmitter. Further, we verify the performance of the proposed algorithms numerically where the obtained results illustrate that the spectral efficiency of the proposed algorithms can approach that of the optimal precoder in certain scenarios. Furthermore, these results illustrate that the proposed hybrid precoding schemes have superior spectral efficiency performance while requiring lower (or at most comparable) channel feedback overhead in comparison with the prior art

    Collaborative modulation multiple access for single hop and multihop networks

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    While the bandwidth available for wireless networks is limited, the world has seen an unprecedented growth in the number of mobile subscribers and an ever increasing demand for high data rates. Therefore efficient utilisation of bandwidth to maximise link spectral efficiency and number of users that can be served simultaneously are primary goals in the design of wireless systems. To achieve these goals, in this thesis, a new non-orthogonal uplink multiple access scheme which combines the functionalities of adaptive modulation and multiple access called collaborative modulation multiple access (CMMA) is proposed. CMMA enables multiple users to access the network simultaneously and share the same bandwidth even when only a single receive antenna is available and in the presence of high channel correlation. Instead of competing for resources, users in CMMA share resources collaboratively by employing unique modulation sets (UMS) that differ in phase, power, and/or mapping structure. These UMS are designed to insure that the received signal formed from the superposition of all users’ signals belongs to a composite QAM constellation (CC) with a rate equal to the sum rate of all users. The CC and its constituent UMSs are designed centrally at the BS to remove ambiguity, maximize the minimum Euclidian distance (dmin) of the CC and insure a minimum BER performance is maintained. Users collaboratively precode their transmitted signal by performing truncated channel inversion and phase rotation using channel state information (CSI ) obtained from a periodic common pilot to insure that their combined signal at the BS belongs to the CC known at the BS which in turn performs a simple joint maximum likelihood detection without the need for CSI. The coherent addition of users’ power enables CMMA to achieve high link spectral efficiency at any time without extra power or bandwidth but on the expense of graceful degradation in BER performance. To improve the BER performance of CMMA while preserving its precoding and detection structure and without the need for pilot-aided channel estimation, a new selective diversity combining scheme called SC-CMMA is proposed. SC-CMMA optimises the overall group performance providing fairness and diversity gain for various users with different transmit powers and channel conditions by selecting a single antenna out of a group of L available antennas that minimises the total transmit power required for precoding at any one time. A detailed study of capacity and BER performance of CMMA and SC-CMMA is carried out under different level of channel correlations which shows that both offer high capacity gain and resilience to channel correlation. SC-CMMA capacity even increase with high channel correlation between users’ channels. CMMA provides a practical solution for implementing the multiple access adder channel (MAAC) in fading environments hence a hybrid approach combining both collaborative coding and modulation referred to as H-CMMA is investigated. H-CMMA divides users into a number of subgroups where users within a subgroup are assigned the same modulation set and different multiple access codes. H-CMMA adjusts the dmin of the received CC by varying the number of subgroups which in turn varies the number of unique constellation points for the same number of users and average total power. Therefore H-CMMA can accommodate many users with different rates while flexibly managing the complexity, rate and BER performance depending on the SNR. Next a new scheme combining CMMA with opportunistic scheduling using only partial CSI at the receiver called CMMA-OS is proposed to combine both the power gain of CMMA and the multiuser diversity gain that arises from users’ channel independence. To avoid the complexity and excessive feedback associated with the dynamic update of the CC, the BS takes into account the independence of users’ channels in the design of the CC and its constituent UMSs but both remain unchanged thereafter. However UMS are no longer associated with users, instead channel gain’s probability density function is divided into regions with identical probability and each UMS is associated with a specific region. This will simplify scheduling as users can initially chose their UMS based on their CSI and the BS will only need to resolve any collision when the channels of two or more users are located at the same region. Finally a high rate cooperative communication scheme, called cooperative modulation (CM) is proposed for cooperative multiuser systems. CM combines the reliability of the cooperative diversity with the high spectral efficiency and multiple access capabilities of CMMA. CM maintains low feedback and high spectral efficiency by restricting relaying to a single route with the best overall channel. Two possible variations of CM are proposed depending on whether CSI available only at the users or just at the BS and the selected relay. The first is referred to Precode, Amplify, and Forward (PAF) while the second one is called Decode, Remap, and Forward (DMF). A new route selection algorithm for DMF based on maximising dmin of random CC is also proposed using a novel fast low-complexity multi-stage sphere based algorithm to calculate the dmin at the relay of random CC that is used for both relay selection and detection

    D3.2 First performance results for multi -node/multi -antenna transmission technologies

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    This deliverable describes the current results of the multi-node/multi-antenna technologies investigated within METIS and analyses the interactions within and outside Work Package 3. Furthermore, it identifies the most promising technologies based on the current state of obtained results. This document provides a brief overview of the results in its first part. The second part, namely the Appendix, further details the results, describes the simulation alignment efforts conducted in the Work Package and the interaction of the Test Cases. The results described here show that the investigations conducted in Work Package 3 are maturing resulting in valuable innovative solutions for future 5G systems.Fantini. R.; Santos, A.; De Carvalho, E.; Rajatheva, N.; Popovski, P.; Baracca, P.; Aziz, D.... (2014). D3.2 First performance results for multi -node/multi -antenna transmission technologies. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/7675

    D 3. 3 Final performance results and consolidated view on the most promising multi -node/multi -antenna transmission technologies

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    This document provides the most recent updates on the technical contributions and research challenges focused in WP3. Each Technology Component (TeC) has been evaluated under possible uniform assessment framework of WP3 which is based on the simulation guidelines of WP6. The performance assessment is supported by the simulation results which are in their mature and stable state. An update on the Most Promising Technology Approaches (MPTAs) and their associated TeCs is the main focus of this document. Based on the input of all the TeCs in WP3, a consolidated view of WP3 on the role of multinode/multi-antenna transmission technologies in 5G systems has also been provided. This consolidated view is further supported in this document by the presentation of the impact of MPTAs on METIS scenarios and the addressed METIS goals.Aziz, D.; Baracca, P.; De Carvalho, E.; Fantini, R.; Rajatheva, N.; Popovski, P.; SĂžrensen, JH.... (2015). D 3. 3 Final performance results and consolidated view on the most promising multi -node/multi -antenna transmission technologies. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/7675

    Retournement temporel : application aux réseaux mobiles

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    This thesis studies the time reversal technique to improve the energy efficiency of future mobile networks and reduce the cost of future mobile devices. Time reversal technique consists in using the time inverse of the propagation channel impulse response (between a transceiver and a receiver) as a prefilter. Such pre-filtered signal is received with a stronger power (this is spatial focusing) and with a strong main echo, relatively to secondary echoes (this is time compression). During a previous learning phase, the transceiver estimates the channel by measuring the pilot signal emitted by the receiver. Space-time focusing is obtained only at the condition that the propagation remains identical between the learning phase and the data transmission phase: this is the ‘channel reciprocity’ condition. Numerous works show that spatial focusing allows for the reduction of the required transmit power for a given target received power, on the one hand, and that time compression allow for the reduction of the required complexity at the receiver side to handle multiple echoes, on the other hand. However, studies on complexity reduction are limited to ultra wideband. Some works of this thesis (based on simulations and experimental measurements) show that, for bands which are more typical for future networks (a carrier frequency of 1GHz and a spectrum of 30 MHz to 100 MHz), thanks to time reversal, a simple receiver and a mono-carrier signal are sufficient to reach high data rates. Moreover, the channel reciprocity condition is not verified in two scenarios which are typical from mobile networks. Firstly, in most European mobile networks, the frequency division duplex mode is used. This mode implies that the transceiver and the receiver communicate on distinct carriers, and therefore through different propagation channels. Secondly, when considering a receiver on a moving connected vehicle, the transceiver and the receiver communicate one with each other at distinct instants, corresponding to distinct positions of the vehicles, and therefore through different propagation channels. Some works of this thesis propose solutions to obtain space-time focusing for these two scenarios. Finally, some works of this thesis explore the combination of time reversal with other recent signal processing techniques (spatial modulation, on the one hand, a new multi-carrier waveform, on the other hand), or new deployment scenarios (millimeter waves and large antenna arrays to interconnect the nodes of an ultra dense network) or new applications (guidance and navigation) which can be envisaged for future mobile networks.Cette thĂšse Ă©tudie la technique dite de ‘Retournement Temporel’ afin d’amĂ©liorer l’efficacitĂ© Ă©nergĂ©tique des futurs rĂ©seaux mobiles d’une part, et rĂ©duire le coĂ»t des futurs terminaux mobiles, d’autre part. Le retournement temporel consiste Ă  utiliser l’inverse temporel de la rĂ©ponse impulsionnelle du canal de propagation entre un Ă©metteur et un rĂ©cepteur pour prĂ©filtrer l’émission d’un signal de donnĂ©es. Avantageusement, le signal ainsi prĂ©filtrĂ© est reçu avec une puissance renforcĂ©e (c’est la focalisation spatiale) et un Ă©cho principal qui est renforcĂ© par rapport aux Ă©chos secondaires (c’est la compression temporelle). Lors d’une Ă©tape prĂ©alable d’apprentissage, l’émetteur estime le canal en mesurant un signal pilote provenant du rĂ©cepteur. La focalisation spatiotemporelle n’est obtenue qu’à condition que la propagation demeure identique entre la phase d’apprentissage et la phase de transmission de donnĂ©es : c’est la condition de ‘rĂ©ciprocitĂ© du canal’. De nombreux travaux montrent que la focalisation spatiale permet de rĂ©duire la puissance Ă©mise nĂ©cessaire pour atteindre une puissance cible au rĂ©cepteur d’une part, et que la compression temporelle permet de rĂ©duire la complexitĂ© du rĂ©cepteur nĂ©cessaire pour gĂ©rer l’effet des Ă©chos multiples, d’autre part. Cependant, les Ă©tudes sur la rĂ©duction de la complexitĂ© du rĂ©cepteur se limitent Ă  l’ultra large bande. Des travaux de cette thĂšse (basĂ©s sur des simulations et des mesures expĂ©rimentales) montrent que pour des bandes de frĂ©quences plus typiques des futurs rĂ©seaux mobiles (frĂ©quence porteuse Ă  1GHz et spectre de 30 MHz Ă  100 MHz), grĂące au retournement temporel, un rĂ©cepteur simple et un signal monoporteuse suffisent pour atteindre de hauts dĂ©bits. En outre, la condition de rĂ©ciprocitĂ© du canal n’est pas vĂ©rifiĂ©e dans deux scĂ©narios typiques des rĂ©seaux mobiles. Tout d’abord, dans la plupart des rĂ©seaux mobiles europĂ©ens, le mode de duplex en frĂ©quence est utilisĂ©. Ce mode implique que l’émetteur et le rĂ©cepteur communiquent l’un avec l’autre sur des frĂ©quences porteuses distinctes, et donc Ă  travers des canaux de propagations diffĂ©rents. De plus, lorsqu’on considĂšre un rĂ©cepteur sur un vĂ©hicule connectĂ© en mouvement, l’émetteur et le rĂ©cepteur communiquent l’un avec l’autre Ă  des instants distincts, correspondants Ă  des positions distinctes du vĂ©hicule, et donc Ă  travers des canaux de propagations diffĂ©rents. Des travaux de cette thĂšse proposent des solutions pour obtenir la focalisation spatio-temporelle dans ces deux scenarios. Enfin, des travaux de la thĂšse explorent la combinaison du retournement temporel avec d’autres techniques de traitement de signal rĂ©centes (la modulation spatiale, d’une part, et une nouvelle forme d’onde multiporteuse, d’autre part), ou des scenarios de dĂ©ploiement nouveaux (ondes millimĂ©triques et trĂšs grands rĂ©seaux d’antennes pour inter-connecter les noeuds d’un rĂ©seau ultra dense) ou de nouvelles applications (guidage et navigation) envisageables pour les futurs rĂ©seaux mobiles

    Radio Communications

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    In the last decades the restless evolution of information and communication technologies (ICT) brought to a deep transformation of our habits. The growth of the Internet and the advances in hardware and software implementations modiïŹed our way to communicate and to share information. In this book, an overview of the major issues faced today by researchers in the ïŹeld of radio communications is given through 35 high quality chapters written by specialists working in universities and research centers all over the world. Various aspects will be deeply discussed: channel modeling, beamforming, multiple antennas, cooperative networks, opportunistic scheduling, advanced admission control, handover management, systems performance assessment, routing issues in mobility conditions, localization, web security. Advanced techniques for the radio resource management will be discussed both in single and multiple radio technologies; either in infrastructure, mesh or ad hoc networks

    Wireless Techniques for Body-Centric Cooperative Communications

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    Body-centric and cooperative communications are new trends in telecommunications field. Being concerned with human behaviour, body-centric communication networks, also known as Wireless Body Area Networks (WBANs), are suitable for a wide variety of applications. The advances in the miniaturisation of embedded devices to be placed on or around the body, foster the diffusion of these systems, where the human body is the key element defining communication characteristics. Cooperative communications paradigm, on the other hand, is one of the emerging technologies that promises significantly higher reliability and spectral efficiency in wireless networks. This thesis investigates possible applications of the cooperative communication paradigm to body-centric networks and, more generally, to Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). Firstly, communication protocols for WBANs are in the spotlight. Performance achieved by different approaches is evaluated and compared through experimentation providing guidelines for choosing appropriate protocol and setting protocol parameters to meet application requirements. Secondly, a cooperative Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) scheme for WBANs is presented. The scheme, named B-MIMO, exploits the natural heterogeneity of the WBAN propagation channel to improve energy efficiency of the system. Finally, a WSN scenario is considered, where sensor nodes cooperate to establish a massive MIMO-like system. The analysis and subsequent optimisation show the advantages of cooperation in terms of energy efficiency and provide insights on how many nodes should be deployed in such a scenario

    Cancelamento de interferĂȘncia em sistemas celulares distribuĂ­dos

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    Doutoramento em Engenharia ElectrotĂ©cnicaO tema principal desta tese Ă© o problema de cancelamento de interferĂȘncia para sistemas multi-utilizador, com antenas distribuĂ­das. Como tal, ao iniciar, uma visĂŁo geral das principais propriedades de um sistema de antenas distribuĂ­das Ă© apresentada. Esta descrição inclui o estudo analĂ­tico do impacto da ligação, dos utilizadores do sistema, a mais antenas distribuĂ­das. Durante essa anĂĄlise Ă© demonstrado que a propriedade mais importante do sistema para obtenção do ganho mĂĄximo, atravĂ©s da ligação de mais antenas de transmissĂŁo, Ă© a simetria espacial e que os utilizadores nas fronteiras das cĂ©lulas sĂŁo os mais bene ciados. Tais resultados sĂŁo comprovados atravĂ©s de simulação. O problema de cancelamento de interferĂȘncia multi-utilizador Ă© considerado tanto para o caso unidimensional (i.e. sem codi cação) como para o multidimensional (i.e. com codi cação). Para o caso unidimensional um algoritmo de prĂ©-codi cação nĂŁo-linear Ă© proposto e avaliado, tendo como objectivo a minimização da taxa de erro de bit. Tanto o caso de portadora Ășnica como o de multipla-portadora sĂŁo abordados, bem como o cenĂĄrio de antenas colocadas e distribuidas. É demonstrado que o esquema proposto pode ser visto como uma extensĂŁo do bem conhecido esquema de zeros forçados, cuja desempenho Ă© provado ser um limite inferior para o esquema generalizado. O algoritmo Ă© avaliado, para diferentes cenĂĄrios, atravĂ©s de simulação, a qual indica desempenho perto do Ăłptimo, com baixa complexidade. Para o caso multi-dimensional um esquema para efectuar "dirty paper coding" binĂĄrio, tendo como base cĂłdigos de dupla camada Ă© proposto. No desenvolvimento deste esquema, a compressĂŁo com perdas de informação, Ă© considerada como um subproblema. Resultados de simulação indicam transmissĂŁo dedigna proxima do limite de Shannon.This thesis focus on the interference cancellation problem for multiuser distributed antenna systems. As such it starts by giving an overview of the main properties of a distributed antenna system. This overview includes, an analytical investigation of the impact of the connection of additional distributed antennas, to the system users. That analysis shows that the most important system property to reach the maximum gain, with the connection of additional transmit antennas, is spatial symmetry and that the users at the cell borders are the most bene ted. The multiuser interference problem has been considered for both the one dimensional (i.e. without coding) and multidimensional (i.e. with coding) cases. In the unidimensional case, we propose and evaluate a nonlinear precoding algorithm for the minimization of the bit-error-rate, of a multiuser MIMO system. Both the single-carrier and multi-carrier cases are tackled as well as the co-located and distributed scenarios. It is demonstrated that the proposed scheme can be viewed as an extension of the well-known zero-forcing, whose performance is proven to be a lower bound for the generalized scheme. The algorithm was validated extensively through numerical simulations, which indicate a performance close to the optimal, with reduced complexity. For the multi-dimensional case, a binary dirty paper coding scheme, base on bilayer codes, is proposed. In the development of this scheme, we consider the lossy compression of a binary source as a sub-problem. Simulation results indicate reliable transmission close to the Shannon limit

    Distributed Protocols for Signal-Scale Cooperation

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    Signal-scale cooperation is a class of techniques designed to harness the same gains offered by multi-antenna communication in scenarios where devices are too small to contain an array of antennas. While the potential improvements in reliability at the physical layer are well known, three key challenges must be addressed to harness these gains at the medium access layer: (a) the distributed synchronization and coordination of devices to enable cooperative behavior, (b) the conservation of energy for devices cooperating to help others, and (c) the management of increased inter-device interference caused by multiple spatially separate transmissions in a cooperative network. In this thesis, we offer three contributions that respectively answer the above three challenges. First, we present two novel cooperative medium access control protocols: Distributed On-demand Cooperation (DOC) and Power-controlled Distributed On-demand Cooperation (PDOC). These protocols utilize negative acknowledgments to synchronize and trigger cooperative relay transmissions in a completely distributed manner. Furthermore, they avoid cooperative transmissions that would likely be unhelpful to the source of the traffic. Second, we present an energy conservation algorithm known as Distributed Energy-Conserving Cooperation (DECC). DECC allows devices to alter their cooperative behavior based on measured changes to their own energy efficiency. With DECC, devices become self-aware of the impact of signal-scale cooperation -- they explicitly monitor their own performance and scale the degree to which they cooperate with others accordingly. Third and finally, we present a series of protocols to combat the challenge of inter-device interference. Whereas energy efficiency can be addressed by a self-aware device monitoring its own performance, inter-device interference requires devices with network awareness that understand the impact of their behavior on the devices around them. We investigate and quantify the impact of incomplete network awareness by proposing a modeling approximation to derive relaying policy behaviors. We then map these policies to protocols for wireless channels
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