422 research outputs found
Distributed Linear Precoding and User Selection in Coordinated Multicell Systems
In this manuscript we tackle the problem of semi-distributed user selection
with distributed linear precoding for sum rate maximization in multiuser
multicell systems. A set of adjacent base stations (BS) form a cluster in order
to perform coordinated transmission to cell-edge users, and coordination is
carried out through a central processing unit (CU). However, the message
exchange between BSs and the CU is limited to scheduling control signaling and
no user data or channel state information (CSI) exchange is allowed. In the
considered multicell coordinated approach, each BS has its own set of cell-edge
users and transmits only to one intended user while interference to
non-intended users at other BSs is suppressed by signal steering (precoding).
We use two distributed linear precoding schemes, Distributed Zero Forcing (DZF)
and Distributed Virtual Signal-to-Interference-plus-Noise Ratio (DVSINR).
Considering multiple users per cell and the backhaul limitations, the BSs rely
on local CSI to solve the user selection problem. First we investigate how the
signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) regime and the number of antennas at the BSs affect
the effective channel gain (the magnitude of the channels after precoding) and
its relationship with multiuser diversity. Considering that user selection must
be based on the type of implemented precoding, we develop metrics of
compatibility (estimations of the effective channel gains) that can be computed
from local CSI at each BS and reported to the CU for scheduling decisions.
Based on such metrics, we design user selection algorithms that can find a set
of users that potentially maximizes the sum rate. Numerical results show the
effectiveness of the proposed metrics and algorithms for different
configurations of users and antennas at the base stations.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Joint Beamforming and Power Control in Coordinated Multicell: Max-Min Duality, Effective Network and Large System Transition
This paper studies joint beamforming and power control in a coordinated
multicell downlink system that serves multiple users per cell to maximize the
minimum weighted signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio. The optimal solution
and distributed algorithm with geometrically fast convergence rate are derived
by employing the nonlinear Perron-Frobenius theory and the multicell network
duality. The iterative algorithm, though operating in a distributed manner,
still requires instantaneous power update within the coordinated cluster
through the backhaul. The backhaul information exchange and message passing may
become prohibitive with increasing number of transmit antennas and increasing
number of users. In order to derive asymptotically optimal solution, random
matrix theory is leveraged to design a distributed algorithm that only requires
statistical information. The advantage of our approach is that there is no
instantaneous power update through backhaul. Moreover, by using nonlinear
Perron-Frobenius theory and random matrix theory, an effective primal network
and an effective dual network are proposed to characterize and interpret the
asymptotic solution.Comment: Some typos in the version publised in the IEEE Transactions on
Wireless Communications are correcte
Robust Monotonic Optimization Framework for Multicell MISO Systems
The performance of multiuser systems is both difficult to measure fairly and
to optimize. Most resource allocation problems are non-convex and NP-hard, even
under simplifying assumptions such as perfect channel knowledge, homogeneous
channel properties among users, and simple power constraints. We establish a
general optimization framework that systematically solves these problems to
global optimality. The proposed branch-reduce-and-bound (BRB) algorithm handles
general multicell downlink systems with single-antenna users, multiantenna
transmitters, arbitrary quadratic power constraints, and robustness to channel
uncertainty. A robust fairness-profile optimization (RFO) problem is solved at
each iteration, which is a quasi-convex problem and a novel generalization of
max-min fairness. The BRB algorithm is computationally costly, but it shows
better convergence than the previously proposed outer polyblock approximation
algorithm. Our framework is suitable for computing benchmarks in general
multicell systems with or without channel uncertainty. We illustrate this by
deriving and evaluating a zero-forcing solution to the general problem.Comment: Published in IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 16 pages, 9
figures, 2 table
Coordinated Multicasting with Opportunistic User Selection in Multicell Wireless Systems
Physical layer multicasting with opportunistic user selection (OUS) is
examined for multicell multi-antenna wireless systems. By adopting a two-layer
encoding scheme, a rate-adaptive channel code is applied in each fading block
to enable successful decoding by a chosen subset of users (which varies over
different blocks) and an application layer erasure code is employed across
multiple blocks to ensure that every user is able to recover the message after
decoding successfully in a sufficient number of blocks. The transmit signal and
code-rate in each block determine opportunistically the subset of users that
are able to successfully decode and can be chosen to maximize the long-term
multicast efficiency. The employment of OUS not only helps avoid
rate-limitations caused by the user with the worst channel, but also helps
coordinate interference among different cells and multicast groups. In this
work, efficient algorithms are proposed for the design of the transmit
covariance matrices, the physical layer code-rates, and the target user subsets
in each block. In the single group scenario, the system parameters are
determined by maximizing the group-rate, defined as the physical layer
code-rate times the fraction of users that can successfully decode in each
block. In the multi-group scenario, the system parameters are determined by
considering a group-rate balancing optimization problem, which is solved by a
successive convex approximation (SCA) approach. To further reduce the feedback
overhead, we also consider the case where only part of the users feed back
their channel vectors in each block and propose a design based on the balancing
of the expected group-rates. In addition to SCA, a sample average approximation
technique is also introduced to handle the probabilistic terms arising in this
problem. The effectiveness of the proposed schemes is demonstrated by computer
simulations.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Interference pricing mechanism for downlink multicell coordinated beamforming
We consider the downlink coordinated beamforming problem in a cellular network in which the base stations (BSs) are equipped with multiple antennas and each user is equipped with a single antenna. The BSs cooperate in sharing their local interference information, and they aim to maximize the sum-rate of the users in the network. A decentralized interference pricing beamforming (IPBF) algorithm is proposed to identify the coordinated beamformer, where a BS is penalized according to the interference it creates to its peers. We show that the decentralized pricing mechanism converges to an interference equilibrium, which is a KKT point of the sum-rate maximization problem. The proofs rely on the identification of rank-1 solutions of each BSs' interference-penalized rate maximization problem. Numerical results show that the proposed iterative mechanism reduces significantly the exchanged information with respect to other state-of-the-art beamforming algorithms with very little sum-rate loss. The version of the algorithm that limits the coordination to a cluster of base stations (IPBF-L) is shown to have very small sum-rate loss with respect to the full coordinated algorithm with much less backhaul information exchange.The work was partially supported by NSF grant CCF-1017982 and SICCNALS project (TEC2011-28219). The work of A. García was partially supported by NSF grant CCF-1017982. A. García-Armada’s work has been partially funded by research projects COMONSENS (CSD2008-00010) and GRE3N (TEC2011-29006-C03-02)Publicad
- …