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Performance Gains of Optimal Antenna Deployment for Massive MIMO Systems

Abstract

We consider the uplink of a single-cell multi-user multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) system with several single antenna transmitters/users and one base station with NN antennas in the Nβ†’βˆžN\rightarrow\infty regime. The base station antennas are evenly distributed to nn admissable locations throughout the cell. First, we show that a reliable (per-user) rate of O(log⁑n)O(\log n) is achievable through optimal locational optimization of base station antennas. We also prove that an O(log⁑n)O(\log n) rate is the best possible. Therefore, in contrast to a centralized or circular deployment, where the achievable rate is at most a constant, the rate with a general deployment can grow logarithmically with nn, resulting in a certain form of "macromultiplexing gain." Second, using tools from high-resolution quantization theory, we derive an accurate formula for the best achievable rate given any nn and any user density function. According to our formula, the dependence of the optimal rate on the user density function ff is curiously only through the differential entropy of ff. In fact, the optimal rate decreases linearly with the differential entropy, and the worst-case scenario is a uniform user density. Numerical simulations confirm our analytical findings.Comment: GLOBECOM 201

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