In this paper, we investigate the impact of phase noise on the secrecy
performance of downlink massive MIMO systems in the presence of a passive
multiple-antenna eavesdropper. Thereby, for the base station (BS) and the
legitimate users, the effect of multiplicative phase noise is taken into
account, whereas the eavesdropper is assumed to employ ideal hardware. We
derive a lower bound for the ergodic secrecy rate of a given user when matched
filter data precoding and artificial noise transmission are employed at the BS.
Based on the derived analytical expression, we investigate the impact of the
various system parameters on the secrecy rate. Our analytical and simulation
results reveal that distributively deployed local oscillators (LOs) can achieve
a better performance than one common LO for all BS antennas as long as a
sufficient amount of power is assigned for data transmission.Comment: Invited paper, submitted to IEEE SPAWC 201