777 research outputs found
Joint Design of Multi-Tap Analog Cancellation and Digital Beamforming for Reduced Complexity Full Duplex MIMO Systems
Incorporating full duplex operation in Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO)
systems provides the potential of boosting throughput performance. However, the
hardware complexity of the analog self-interference canceller scales with the
number of transmit and receive antennas, thus exploiting the benefits of analog
cancellation becomes impractical for full duplex MIMO transceivers. In this
paper, we present a novel architecture for the analog canceller comprising of
reduced number of taps (tap refers to a line of fixed delay and variable phase
shifter and attenuator) and simple multiplexers for efficient signal routing
among the transmit and receive radio frequency chains. In contrast to the
available analog cancellation architectures, the values for each tap and the
configuration of the multiplexers are jointly designed with the digital
beamforming filters according to certain performance objectives. Focusing on a
narrowband flat fading channel model as an example, we present a general
optimization framework for the joint design of analog cancellation and digital
beamforming. We also detail a particular optimization objective together with
its derived solution for the latter architectural components. Representative
computer simulation results demonstrate the superiority of the proposed low
complexity full duplex MIMO system over lately available ones.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, IEEE ICC 201
A Survey of Physical Layer Security Techniques for 5G Wireless Networks and Challenges Ahead
Physical layer security which safeguards data confidentiality based on the
information-theoretic approaches has received significant research interest
recently. The key idea behind physical layer security is to utilize the
intrinsic randomness of the transmission channel to guarantee the security in
physical layer. The evolution towards 5G wireless communications poses new
challenges for physical layer security research. This paper provides a latest
survey of the physical layer security research on various promising 5G
technologies, including physical layer security coding, massive multiple-input
multiple-output, millimeter wave communications, heterogeneous networks,
non-orthogonal multiple access, full duplex technology, etc. Technical
challenges which remain unresolved at the time of writing are summarized and
the future trends of physical layer security in 5G and beyond are discussed.Comment: To appear in IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communication
Exploiting Full-duplex Receivers for Achieving Secret Communications in Multiuser MISO Networks
We consider a broadcast channel, in which a multi-antenna transmitter (Alice)
sends confidential information signals to legitimate users (Bobs) in
the presence of eavesdroppers (Eves). Alice uses MIMO precoding to generate
the information signals along with her own (Tx-based) friendly jamming.
Interference at each Bob is removed by MIMO zero-forcing. This, however, leaves
a "vulnerability region" around each Bob, which can be exploited by a nearby
Eve. We address this problem by augmenting Tx-based friendly jamming (TxFJ)
with Rx-based friendly jamming (RxFJ), generated by each Bob. Specifically,
each Bob uses self-interference suppression (SIS) to transmit a friendly
jamming signal while simultaneously receiving an information signal over the
same channel. We minimize the powers allocated to the information, TxFJ, and
RxFJ signals under given guarantees on the individual secrecy rate for each
Bob. The problem is solved for the cases when the eavesdropper's channel state
information is known/unknown. Simulations show the effectiveness of the
proposed solution. Furthermore, we discuss how to schedule transmissions when
the rate requirements need to be satisfied on average rather than
instantaneously. Under special cases, a scheduling algorithm that serves only
the strongest receivers is shown to outperform the one that schedules all
receivers.Comment: IEEE Transactions on Communication
Hardware Impairments Aware Transceiver Design for Bidirectional Full-Duplex MIMO OFDM Systems
In this paper we address the linear precoding and decoding design problem for
a bidirectional orthogonal frequencydivision multiplexing (OFDM) communication
system, between two multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) full-duplex (FD)
nodes. The effects of hardware distortion as well as the channel state
information error are taken into account. In the first step, we transform the
available time-domain characterization of the hardware distortions for FD MIMO
transceivers to the frequency domain, via a linear Fourier transformation. As a
result, the explicit impact of hardware inaccuracies on the residual
selfinterference (RSI) and inter-carrier leakage (ICL) is formulated in
relation to the intended transmit/received signals. Afterwards, linear
precoding and decoding designs are proposed to enhance the system performance
following the minimum-mean-squarederror (MMSE) and sum rate maximization
strategies, assuming the availability of perfect or erroneous CSI. The proposed
designs are based on the application of alternating optimization over the
system parameters, leading to a necessary convergence. Numerical results
indicate that the application of a distortionaware design is essential for a
system with a high hardware distortion, or for a system with a low thermal
noise variance.Comment: Submitted to IEEE for publicatio
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