Abstract

The potential performance gains promised by massive multi-input and multioutput (MIMO) rely heavily on the access to accurate channel state information (CSI), which is difficult to obtain in practice when channel coherence time is short and the number of mobile users is huge. To make the system with imperfect CSI perform well, we propose a rateless codes-aided massive MIMO scheme, with the aim of approaching the maximum achievable rate (MAR) as well as improving the achieved rate over that based on the fixed-rate codes. More explicitly, a recently proposed family of rateless codes, called spinal codes, are applied to massive MIMO systems, where the spinal codes bring the benefit of approximately achieving the MAR with sufficiently large encoding block size. In addition, the multilevel puncturing and dynamic block-size allocation (MPDBA) scheme is proposed, where the block sizes are determined by user MAR to curb the average retransmission delay for successfully decoding the messages, which further enhances the system retransmission efficiency. Multilevel puncturing, which is MAR dependent, narrows the gap between the system MAR and the related achieved rate. Theoretical analysis is provided to demonstrate that spinal codes with the MPDBA can guarantee the system retransmission efficiency as well as achieved rate, which are also verified by numerical simulations. Finally, a simplified but comparable MIMO testbed with 2 transmit antennas and 2 single-antenna users, based on NI Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) and LabVIEW communication toolkits, is built up to demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposal in realistic wireless channels, which is easy to be extended to massive MIMO scenarios in future.

Highlights

  • Massive multi-input and multioutput (MIMO), achieving high spectral efficiency and low power consumption, has been widely regarded as a promising technique for 5G wireless communication systems

  • We developed a multilevel puncturing and dynamic block-size allocation (MPDBA) scheme, where the maximum achievable rate (MAR) are obtained as a priori knowledge to determine the block sizes dynamically, which can reduce the pass number as well as retransmission delay

  • The numerical simulation results show that spinal codes with MPDBA can make massive MIMO with imperfect channel state information (CSI) work reliably with efficient retransmission

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Summary

Introduction

Massive multi-input and multioutput (MIMO), achieving high spectral efficiency and low power consumption, has been widely regarded as a promising technique for 5G wireless communication systems. The numerical simulation results show that spinal codes with MPDBA can make massive MIMO with imperfect CSI work reliably with efficient retransmission. In order to make the spinal codes based massive MIMO be practical from theory, we consider building up a system with 2 transmit antennas and 2 singleantennas users, where NI USRP and LabVIEW communication toolkits are involved as the hardware and software platforms, respectively. In this implementation demo system, the retransmission efficiency by our proposal is verified in the fading environments.

System Model
Multilevel Puncturing and Dynamic Block-Size Allocation Scheme
Simulation Results and Analysis
Simplified Spinal Codes Based MIMO Demo System with NI USRP 2920
Conclusions
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