5,439 research outputs found
On the Performance Gain of NOMA over OMA in Uplink Communication Systems
In this paper, we investigate and reveal the ergodic sum-rate gain (ESG) of
non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) over orthogonal multiple access (OMA) in
uplink cellular communication systems. A base station equipped with a
single-antenna, with multiple antennas, and with massive antenna arrays is
considered both in single-cell and multi-cell deployments. In particular, in
single-antenna systems, we identify two types of gains brought about by NOMA:
1) a large-scale near-far gain arising from the distance discrepancy between
the base station and users; 2) a small-scale fading gain originating from the
multipath channel fading. Furthermore, we reveal that the large-scale near-far
gain increases with the normalized cell size, while the small-scale fading gain
is a constant, given by = 0.57721 nat/s/Hz, in Rayleigh fading
channels. When extending single-antenna NOMA to -antenna NOMA, we prove that
both the large-scale near-far gain and small-scale fading gain achieved by
single-antenna NOMA can be increased by a factor of for a large number of
users. Moreover, given a massive antenna array at the base station and
considering a fixed ratio between the number of antennas, , and the number
of users, , the ESG of NOMA over OMA increases linearly with both and
. We then further extend the analysis to a multi-cell scenario. Compared to
the single-cell case, the ESG in multi-cell systems degrades as NOMA faces more
severe inter-cell interference due to the non-orthogonal transmissions.
Besides, we unveil that a large cell size is always beneficial to the ergodic
sum-rate performance of NOMA in both single-cell and multi-cell systems.
Numerical results verify the accuracy of the analytical results derived and
confirm the insights revealed about the ESG of NOMA over OMA in different
scenarios.Comment: 51 pages, 7 figures, invited paper, submitted to IEEE Transactions on
Communication
Spectrum Sharing in mmWave Cellular Networks via Cell Association, Coordination, and Beamforming
This paper investigates the extent to which spectrum sharing in mmWave
networks with multiple cellular operators is a viable alternative to
traditional dedicated spectrum allocation. Specifically, we develop a general
mathematical framework by which to characterize the performance gain that can
be obtained when spectrum sharing is used, as a function of the underlying
beamforming, operator coordination, bandwidth, and infrastructure sharing
scenarios. The framework is based on joint beamforming and cell association
optimization, with the objective of maximizing the long-term throughput of the
users. Our asymptotic and non-asymptotic performance analyses reveal five key
points: (1) spectrum sharing with light on-demand intra- and inter-operator
coordination is feasible, especially at higher mmWave frequencies (for example,
73 GHz), (2) directional communications at the user equipment substantially
alleviate the potential disadvantages of spectrum sharing (such as higher
multiuser interference), (3) large numbers of antenna elements can reduce the
need for coordination and simplify the implementation of spectrum sharing, (4)
while inter-operator coordination can be neglected in the large-antenna regime,
intra-operator coordination can still bring gains by balancing the network
load, and (5) critical control signals among base stations, operators, and user
equipment should be protected from the adverse effects of spectrum sharing, for
example by means of exclusive resource allocation. The results of this paper,
and their extensions obtained by relaxing some ideal assumptions, can provide
important insights for future standardization and spectrum policy.Comment: 15 pages. To appear in IEEE JSAC Special Issue on Spectrum Sharing
and Aggregation for Future Wireless Network
Distributed Compressive CSIT Estimation and Feedback for FDD Multi-user Massive MIMO Systems
To fully utilize the spatial multiplexing gains or array gains of massive
MIMO, the channel state information must be obtained at the transmitter side
(CSIT). However, conventional CSIT estimation approaches are not suitable for
FDD massive MIMO systems because of the overwhelming training and feedback
overhead. In this paper, we consider multi-user massive MIMO systems and deploy
the compressive sensing (CS) technique to reduce the training as well as the
feedback overhead in the CSIT estimation. The multi-user massive MIMO systems
exhibits a hidden joint sparsity structure in the user channel matrices due to
the shared local scatterers in the physical propagation environment. As such,
instead of naively applying the conventional CS to the CSIT estimation, we
propose a distributed compressive CSIT estimation scheme so that the compressed
measurements are observed at the users locally, while the CSIT recovery is
performed at the base station jointly. A joint orthogonal matching pursuit
recovery algorithm is proposed to perform the CSIT recovery, with the
capability of exploiting the hidden joint sparsity in the user channel
matrices. We analyze the obtained CSIT quality in terms of the normalized mean
absolute error, and through the closed-form expressions, we obtain simple
insights into how the joint channel sparsity can be exploited to improve the
CSIT recovery performance.Comment: 16 double-column pages, accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions
on Signal Processin
On the energy efficiency-spectral efficiency trade-off of distributed MIMO systems
In this paper, the trade-off between energy efficiency (EE) and spectral efficiency (SE) is analyzed for both the uplink and downlink of the distributed multiple-input multiple-output (DMIMO) system over the Rayleigh fading channel while considering different types of power consumption models (PCMs). A novel tight closed-form approximation of the DMIMO EE-SE trade-off is presented and a detailed analysis is provided for the scenario with practical antenna configurations. Furthermore, generic and accurate low and high-SE approximations of this trade-off are derived for any number of radio access units (RAUs) in both the uplink and downlink channels. Our expressions have been utilized for assessing both the EE gain of DMIMO over co-located MIMO (CMIMO) and the incremental EE gain of DMIMO in the downlink channel. Our results reveal that DMIMO is more energy efficient than CMIMO for cell edge users in both the idealistic and realistic PCMs; whereas in terms of the incremental EE gain, connecting the user terminal to only one RAU is the most energy efficient approach when a realistic PCM is considered
- …