Abstract

Massive multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) techniques have been recently advanced to tremendously improve the performance of wireless communication networks. However, the use of very large antenna arrays at the base stations brings new issues, such as the significantly increased hardware and signal processing costs. In order to reap the performance gains of massive MIMO and yet reduce its cost, this paper proposes a novel system design by integrating an electromagnetic (EM) lens with the large antenna array, termed the EM-lens enabled MIMO. The EM lens has the capability of focusing the power of an incident wave to a small area of the antenna array, whereas the location of the focal area varies with the angle of arrival (AoA) of the wave. Hence, in scenarios where the arriving signals from geographically separated users have different AoAs, the EM-lens enabled receiver provides two new benefits, namely, energy focusing and spatial interference rejection. By taking into account the effects of imperfect channel estimation via pilot-assisted training, in this paper, we analytically show that the average received signal-to-noise ratio in both the single-user and multiuser uplink transmissions can be improved by the EM-lens enabled system. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the proposed design makes it possible to considerably reduce the hardware and signal processing costs with only slight degradations in performance. To this end, two complexity/cost reduction schemes are proposed, which are small-MIMO processing with parallel receiver filtering applied over subgroups of antennas to reduce the computational complexity, and channel covariance based antenna selection to reduce the required number of radio frequency chains. Numerical results are provided to corroborate our analysis and show the great potential advantages of our proposed EM-lens enabled MIMO system for next generation cellular networks.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call