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Massive MIMO for Maximal Spectral Efficiency: How Many Users and Pilots Should Be Allocated?

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TLDR
In this article, the optimal number of scheduled users in a massive MIMO system with arbitrary pilot reuse and random user locations is analyzed in a closed form, while simulations are used to show what happens at finite $M$, in different interference scenarios, with different pilot reuse factors, and for different processing schemes.
Abstract
Massive MIMO is a promising technique for increasing the spectral efficiency (SE) of cellular networks, by deploying antenna arrays with hundreds or thousands of active elements at the base stations and performing coherent transceiver processing. A common rule-of-thumb is that these systems should have an order of magnitude more antennas $M$ than scheduled users $K$ because the users’ channels are likely to be near-orthogonal when $M/K > 10$ . However, it has not been proved that this rule-of-thumb actually maximizes the SE. In this paper, we analyze how the optimal number of scheduled users $K^\star$ depends on $M$ and other system parameters. To this end, new SE expressions are derived to enable efficient system-level analysis with power control, arbitrary pilot reuse, and random user locations. The value of $K^\star$ in the large- $M$ regime is derived in closed form, while simulations are used to show what happens at finite $M$ , in different interference scenarios, with different pilot reuse factors, and for different processing schemes. Up to half the coherence block should be dedicated to pilots and the optimal $M/K$ is less than 10 in many cases of practical relevance. Interestingly, $K^\star$ depends strongly on the processing scheme and hence it is unfair to compare different schemes using the same $K$ .

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Massive MIMO: ten myths and one critical question

TL;DR: This overview article identifies 10 myths of Massive MIMO and explains why they are not true, and asks a question that is critical for the practical adoption of the technology and which will require intense future research activities to answer properly.
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Massive MIMO is a reality—What is next?: Five promising research directions for antenna arrays

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explain how the first chapter of the massive MIMO research saga has come to an end, while the story has just begun, and outline five new massive antenna array related research directions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Making Cell-Free Massive MIMO Competitive With MMSE Processing and Centralized Implementation

TL;DR: In this paper, the uplink spectral efficiencies of four different cell-free implementations are analyzed, with spatially correlated fading and arbitrary linear processing, and it is shown that a centralized implementation with optimal minimum mean-square error (MMSE) processing not only maximizes the SE but largely reduces the fronthaul signaling compared to the standard distributed approach.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fundamentals of statistical signal processing: estimation theory

TL;DR: The Fundamentals of Statistical Signal Processing: Estimation Theory as mentioned in this paper is a seminal work in the field of statistical signal processing, and it has been used extensively in many applications.
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Noncooperative Cellular Wireless with Unlimited Numbers of Base Station Antennas

TL;DR: A cellular base station serves a multiplicity of single-antenna terminals over the same time-frequency interval and a complete multi-cellular analysis yields a number of mathematically exact conclusions and points to a desirable direction towards which cellular wireless could evolve.
Journal ArticleDOI

Massive MIMO for next generation wireless systems

TL;DR: While massive MIMO renders many traditional research problems irrelevant, it uncovers entirely new problems that urgently need attention: the challenge of making many low-cost low-precision components that work effectively together, acquisition and synchronization for newly joined terminals, the exploitation of extra degrees of freedom provided by the excess of service antennas, reducing internal power consumption to achieve total energy efficiency reductions, and finding new deployment scenarios.
Journal ArticleDOI

Five disruptive technology directions for 5G

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe five technologies that could lead to both architectural and component disruptive design changes: device-centric architectures, millimeter wave, massive MIMO, smarter devices, and native support for machine-to-machine communications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy and Spectral Efficiency of Very Large Multiuser MIMO Systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the tradeoff between the energy efficiency and spectral efficiency of a single-antenna system is quantified for a channel model that includes small-scale fading but not large scale fading, and it is shown that the use of moderately large antenna arrays can improve the spectral and energy efficiency with orders of magnitude compared to a single antenna system.
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