1,770 research outputs found
Scaling up MIMO: Opportunities and Challenges with Very Large Arrays
This paper surveys recent advances in the area of very large MIMO systems.
With very large MIMO, we think of systems that use antenna arrays with an
order of magnitude more elements than in systems being built today, say a
hundred antennas or more. Very large MIMO entails an unprecedented number of
antennas simultaneously serving a much smaller number of terminals. The
disparity in number emerges as a desirable operating condition and a practical
one as well. The number of terminals that can be simultaneously served is
limited, not by the number of antennas, but rather by our inability to acquire
channel-state information for an unlimited number of terminals. Larger numbers
of terminals can always be accommodated by combining very large MIMO technology
with conventional time- and frequency-division multiplexing via OFDM. Very
large MIMO arrays is a new research field both in communication theory,
propagation, and electronics and represents a paradigm shift in the way of
thinking both with regards to theory, systems and implementation. The ultimate
vision of very large MIMO systems is that the antenna array would consist of
small active antenna units, plugged into an (optical) fieldbus.Comment: Accepted for publication in the IEEE Signal Processing Magazine,
October 201
Adaptive Multicell 3D Beamforming in Multi-Antenna Cellular Networks
We consider a cellular network with multi-antenna base stations (BSs) and
single-antenna users, multicell cooperation, imperfect channel state
information, and directional antennas each with a vertically adjustable beam.
We investigate the impact of the elevation angle of the BS antenna pattern,
denoted as tilt, on the performance of the considered network when employing
either a conventional single-cell transmission or a fully cooperative multicell
transmission. Using the results of this investigation, we propose a novel
hybrid multicell cooperation technique in which the intercell interference is
controlled via either cooperative beamforming in the horizontal plane or
coordinated beamfroming in the vertical plane of the wireless channel, denoted
as adaptive multicell 3D beamforming. The main idea is to divide the coverage
area into two disjoint vertical regions and adapt the multicell cooperation
strategy at the BSs when serving each region. A fair scheduler is used to share
the time-slots between the vertical regions. It is shown that the proposed
technique can achieve performance comparable to that of a fully cooperative
transmission but with a significantly lower complexity and signaling
requirements. To make the performance analysis computationally efficient,
analytical expressions for the user ergodic rates under different beamforming
strategies are also derived.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Transaction on Vehicular Technolog
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