Abstract

This paper considers the problem of joint power allocation and antenna selection (J-PA-AS) for downlink (DL) and uplink (UL) clustered non-orthogonal multiple-access (NOMA) networks. In particular, the goal is to perform antenna selection for each user cluster and allocate transmit power to its users so as to maximize the network sum-rate in the DL and UL directions, while satisfying quality-of-service (QoS) requirements. The formulated problem happens to be non-convex and NP-hard, and thus, there is no systematic or computationally-efficient approach to solve it directly. In turn, a low-complexity two-stage algorithm is proposed. Specifically, the first stage optimally solves the sum-rate maximizing power allocation for each (antenna, user cluster) pair. After that, antenna selection is optimally solved in polynomial-time complexity via the Kuhn–Munkres with backtracking (KMB) algorithm. Extensive simulation results are provided to validate the proposed algorithm, which is shown to efficiently yield the optimal network sum-rate in each link direction, in comparison to the optimal J-PA-AS scheme (solved via a global optimization package), and superior to other benchmark schemes. Light is also shed on the impact of spatial-diversity on the network sum-rate, where it is shown that the greater the number of base-station antennas is, the higher the network sum-rate, and the lower the outage events. Additionally, the significance of decoupling antenna selection in each link direction on the network sum-rate is highlighted. Lastly, the cases of imperfect channel state information (CSI) and imperfect successive interference cancellation (SIC) have been investigated, where it is demonstrated that spatial-diversity gains reduce the adverse effects of imperfect CSI and SIC on the network sum-rate.

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