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Journal ArticleDOI

Multiuser MIMO in Distributed Antenna Systems With Out-of-Cell Interference

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TLDR
Several downlink multiuser multiple input multiple output (MIMO) DAS strategies are proposed and compared in terms of per-user throughput and area spectral efficiency and approximations of the ergodic rate are proposed to facilitate rapid simulation and design space exploration.
Abstract
Distributed antenna systems (DAS) augment the base station's transmit capability by adding multiple remote radio units, connected to the base station via a high bandwidth and low latency link. With DAS, the base station operates as if it had multiple antennas, but the antennas happen to be in different geographic locations. DAS have been shown to enhance coverage and capacity in cellular systems, in a variety of different configurations. This paper proposes, analyzes, and compares several downlink multiuser multiple input multiple output (MIMO) DAS strategies in terms of per-user throughput and area spectral efficiency. Zero-forcing transmit beamforming is used for transmission, the remote radio units may have one or more antennas, and the subscriber has a single receive antenna. Techniques considered include beamforming across all remote radio units (full transmission), using the same beamforming vector for each remote radio unit (simplified transmission), and selecting a subset of remote radio units. To facilitate rapid simulation and design space exploration, approximations of the ergodic rate are proposed for each technique assuming path-loss, small-scale Rayleigh fading, and out-of-cell interference. Simulations accounting for multiple interfering cells are used to compare the different transmission techniques. Full transmission is found to have the best performance even accounting for out-of-cell interference, though gains diminish for higher numbers of active users. Simplified transmission improves over no DAS but performance degrades with more active remote radio units.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling Heterogeneous Network Interference Using Poisson Point Processes

TL;DR: This paper proposes to analyze downlink performance in a fixed-size cell, which is inscribed within a weighted Voronoi cell in a Poisson field of interferers, using recent applications of stochastic geometry to analyze cellular systems.
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Survey of Large-Scale MIMO Systems

TL;DR: The state of the art of LS-MIMO systems is surveyed and some typical application scenarios are classified and analyzed and key techniques of both the physical and network layers are detailed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A current perspective on distributed antenna systems for the downlink of cellular systems

TL;DR: A key observation is that distributed antenna systems are tightly integrated into the cellular architecture, and incorporate physical layer technologies like MIMO communication and multiuser MIMo to provide higher data rates.
Book

Foundations of MIMO Communication

TL;DR: Understand the fundamentals of wireless and MIMO communication with this accessible and comprehensive text, which provides a sound treatment of the key concepts underpinning contemporary wireless communication and M IMO, all the way to massive MIMo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Large-Scale MIMO Versus Network MIMO for Multicell Interference Mitigation

TL;DR: It is shown that in fact an LS-MIMO system provides considerably better performance than a network MIMo system, given the likely lower cost of adding excess number of antennas, and could be a preferred multicell coordination approach for interference mitigation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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An overview of limited feedback in wireless communication systems

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