Abstract

Massive MIMO using low-resolution digital-to-analog converters (DACs) at the base station (BS) is an attractive downlink approach for reducing hardware overhead and for reducing power consumption, but managing the large quantization noise effect is a challenge. Spatial Sigma-Delta (ΣΔ) modulation is a recently emerged technique for tackling the aforementioned effect. Assuming a uniform linear array at the BS, it works by shaping the quantization noise as high spatial-frequency, or angle, noise. By restricting the user-serving region to be within a smaller angular region, the quan-tization noise incurred by the users can be effectively reduced. We previously showed that, under the one-bit DAC case, the quantization noise can be satisfactorily contained using a simple first-order ΣΔ modulation scheme. In this work we study the potential of spatial ΣΔ modulation in the two-bit DAC case and under second-order modulation. Our empirical results indicate that second-order spatial ΣΔ modulation provides better quantization noise suppression.

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