111 research outputs found

    Dealing with Interference in Distributed Large-scale MIMO Systems: A Statistical Approach

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    This paper considers the problem of interference control through the use of second-order statistics in massive MIMO multi-cell networks. We consider both the cases of co-located massive arrays and large-scale distributed antenna settings. We are interested in characterizing the low-rankness of users' channel covariance matrices, as such a property can be exploited towards improved channel estimation (so-called pilot decontamination) as well as interference rejection via spatial filtering. In previous work, it was shown that massive MIMO channel covariance matrices exhibit a useful finite rank property that can be modeled via the angular spread of multipath at a MIMO uniform linear array. This paper extends this result to more general settings including certain non-uniform arrays, and more surprisingly, to two dimensional distributed large scale arrays. In particular our model exhibits the dependence of the signal subspace's richness on the scattering radius around the user terminal, through a closed form expression. The applications of the low-rankness covariance property to channel estimation's denoising and low-complexity interference filtering are highlighted.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, to appear in IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processin

    Deploying Dense Networks for Maximal Energy Efficiency: Small Cells Meet Massive MIMO

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    How would a cellular network designed for maximal energy efficiency look like? To answer this fundamental question, tools from stochastic geometry are used in this paper to model future cellular networks and obtain a new lower bound on the average uplink spectral efficiency. This enables us to formulate a tractable uplink energy efficiency (EE) maximization problem and solve it analytically with respect to the density of base stations (BSs), the transmit power levels, the number of BS antennas and users per cell, and the pilot reuse factor. The closed-form expressions obtained from this general EE maximization framework provide valuable insights on the interplay between the optimization variables, hardware characteristics, and propagation environment. Small cells are proved to give high EE, but the EE improvement saturates quickly with the BS density. Interestingly, the maximal EE is achieved by also equipping the BSs with multiple antennas and operate in a "massive MIMO" fashion, where the array gain from coherent detection mitigates interference and the multiplexing of many users reduces the energy cost per user.Comment: To appear in IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 15 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl

    MIMO Systems

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    In recent years, it was realized that the MIMO communication systems seems to be inevitable in accelerated evolution of high data rates applications due to their potential to dramatically increase the spectral efficiency and simultaneously sending individual information to the corresponding users in wireless systems. This book, intends to provide highlights of the current research topics in the field of MIMO system, to offer a snapshot of the recent advances and major issues faced today by the researchers in the MIMO related areas. The book is written by specialists working in universities and research centers all over the world to cover the fundamental principles and main advanced topics on high data rates wireless communications systems over MIMO channels. Moreover, the book has the advantage of providing a collection of applications that are completely independent and self-contained; thus, the interested reader can choose any chapter and skip to another without losing continuity

    Adaptive Communication for Wireless Massive MIMO Systems

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    The demand for high data rates in wireless communications is increasing rapidly. One way to provide reliable communication with increased rates is massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems where a large number of antennas is deployed. We analyze three systems utilizing a large number of antennas to provide enhancement in the performance of wireless communications. First, we consider a general form of spatial modulation (SM) systems where the number of transmitted data streams is allowed to vary and we refer to it as generalized spatial modulation with multiplexing (GSMM). A Gaussian mixture model (GMM) is shown to accurately model the transmitted spatially modulated signal using a precoding framework. Using this transmit model, a general closed-form expression for the achievable rate when operating over Rayleigh fading channels is evaluated along with a tight upper and a lower bounds for the achievable rate. The obtained expressions are flexible enough to accommodate any form of SM by adjusting the precoding set. Followed by that, we study quantized distributed wireless relay networks where a relay consisting of many geographically dispersed nodes is facilitating communication between unconnected users. Due to bandwidth constraints, distributed relay networks perform quantization at the relay nodes, and hence they are referred to as quantized distributed relay networks. In such systems, users transmit their data simultaneously to the relay nodes through the uplink channel that quantize their observed signals independently to a few bits and broadcast these bits to the users through the downlink channel. We develop algorithms that can be employed by the users to estimate the uplink channels between all users and all relay nodes when the relay nodes are performing simple sign quantization. This setup is very useful in either extending coverage to unconnected regions or replacing the existing wireless infrastructure in case of disasters. Using the uplink channel estimates, we propose multiple decoders that can be deployed at the receiver side. We also study the performance of each of these decoders under different system assumptions. A different quantization framework is also proposed for quantized distributed relay networking where the relay nodes perform vector quantization instead of sign quantization. Applying vector quantization at the relay nodes enables us to propose an algorithm that allocates quantization resources efficiently among the relay nodes inside the relay network. We also study the beamforming design at the users’ side in this case where beamforming design is not trivial due to the quantization that occurs at the relay network. Finally, we study a different setup of distributed communication systems called cell-free massive MIMO. In cell-free massive MIMO, regular cellular communication is replaced by multiple access points (APs) that are placed randomly over the coverage area. All users in the coverage area are sharing time and frequency resources and all APs are serving all UEs while power allocation is done in a central processor that is connected to the APs through a high speed backhaul network. We study the power allocation in cell-free massive MIMO system where APs are equipped with few antennas and how the distribution of the available antennas among access points affects both the performance and the infrastructure cost

    Deploying Dense Networks for Maximal Energy Efficiency: Small Cells Meet Massive MIMO

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    How would a cellular network designed for maximal energy efficiency look like? To answer this fundamental question, we model future cellular networks using stochastic geometry and obtain a new lower bound on the average uplink spectral efficiency. This enables us to formulate a tractable energy efficiency (EE) maximization problem and solve it analytically with respect to the density of base stations (BSs), the transmit power levels, the number of BS antennas and users per cell, and the pilot reuse factor. The closed-form expressions obtained from this general EE maximization framework provide valuable insights on the interplay between the optimization variables, hardware characteristics, and propagation environment. Small cells are proved to give high EE, but the EE improvement saturates quickly with the BS density. Interestingly, the maximal EE is obtained by also equipping the BSs with multiple antennas and operate in a "massive MIMO" fashion, where the array gain from coherent detection mitigates interference and the multiplexing of many users reduces the energy cost per user

    Multiple-antenna systems in ad-hoc wireless networks

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2008.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 223-229).The increasing demand for wireless communication services has resulted in crowding of the electromagnetic spectrum. The "spectral-commons" model, where a portion of the electromagnetic spectrum is public and used on an ad-hoc basis, has been proposed to free up spectrum that has been allocated but underutilized. Ad-hoc wireless networks (networks with no central control) are also interesting in their own right as they do not require costly infrastructure, are robust to single-node failures, and can be deployed in environments where it is difficult to deploy infrastructure. The main contributions of this thesis are expressions for the mean and in some cases the variance of the spectral efficiency (bits/second/Hz) of single-hop links in random wireless networks as a function of the number of antennas per node, link-length, interferer density, and path-loss-exponent (an environmental parameter that determines signal decay with distance), under assumptions chosen for realistic implementability in the near future. These results improve our understanding of such systems as they indicate the data rates achievable as a function of tangible parameters like user density and environmental characteristics, and are useful for designers of wireless networks to trade-off hardware costs, data-rates, and user densities. We found that constant mean spectral efficiencies can be maintained in wireless networks with increasing user density by linearly increasing the number of antenna elements per user, or by maintaining a constant fraction of nodes connected to high capacity infrastructure like optical fiber, equipped with antenna arrays. These are promising ways to serve an increasing density of users without increasing bandwidth. Additionally, several interesting features of such networks have been highlighted.(cont.) For instance we found that the mean and variance of spectral efficiencies can be characterized in terms of a parameter called the link rank, which on average equals the number of interferers whose signal power is stronger at a representative receiver than its target transmitter. Rank thus combines the effects of node density and link lengths. Another interesting finding is that mean spectral efficiency in networks with rank-1 links, and equal numbers of antennas at transmit and receive sides can be improved if nodes turn off two thirds of their transmit antennas. These results were derived using infinite random matrix theory and validated using Monte Carlo simulations which were also used to characterize the distribution of spectral efficiencies in such networks.by Siddhartan Govindasamy.Ph.D
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