Densely deployed indoor massive MIMO experiment: From small cells to spectrum sharing to cooperation


Abstract:

Massive MIMO is a key 5G technology that achieves high spectral efficiency and capacity by significantly increasing the number of antennas per cell. Furthermore, due to precoding, massive MIMO allows co-channel interference cancellation across cells. In this work, based on experimental channel data for an indoor scenario, we analyse the impact of inter and intra-cell interference suppression in terms of spectral efficiency, capacity, user fairness and computational cost for three simulated systems under different cooperation levels. The first scenario assumes a cooperative case where eight neighbouring cells share the spectrum and infrastructure. This scenario provides the highest system performance; however, user fairness is achieved only when there is inter and intra-cell interference suppression. The second scenario considers eight cells that only share the spectrum; with full intra-cell and inter-cell interference cancellation, it is possible to achieve 32% of the optimal capacity with 20% of the computational cost in each distributed CPU, although the total computational cost per system is the highest. The third scenario considers eight independent cells operating in different frequency bands; in this case, intra-cell interference suppression leads to higher spectral efficiency compared to the cooperative case without intra-cell interference suppression.

Año de publicación:

2021

Keywords:

  • massive MIMO
  • Spectrum Sharing
  • Spectral efficiency
  • Infrastructure sharing
  • Infrastructure cooperation

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso abierto

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Comunicación
  • Red inalámbrica

Áreas temáticas:

  • Ciencias de la computación
  • Física aplicada
  • Interacción social