Abstract

Recently, the so-called cell-free (CF) massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) architecture has been introduced, wherein a very large number of distributed access points (APs) simultaneously and jointly serve a much smaller number of mobile stations (MSs). The paper extends the CF approach to the case in which both the APs and the MSs are equipped with multiple antennas, proposing a beamfoming scheme that, relying on the zero-forcing strategy, does not require channel estimation at the MSs. We contrast the originally proposed formulation of CF massive MIMO with a user-centric (UC) approach wherein each MS is served only by a limited number of APs. Exploiting the framework of successive lower-bound maximization, the paper also proposes and analyzes power allocation strategies aimed at either sum-rate maximization or minimum-rate maximization, both for the uplink and downlink. Results show that the UC approach, which requires smaller backhaul overhead and is more scalable that the CF deployment, also achieves generally better performance than the CF approach for the vast majority of the users, especially on the uplink.

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