1 / 39

MIMO Systems: Myths and Realities

MIMO Systems: Myths and Realities. Ralf R. Müller NTNU. Myths. Max Weber 1943. Myth 1: In order to get any noticeable MIMO effect, the antennas may not be spaced much closer than half a wavelength. This myth is a result of erroneous antenna matching. No coupling. Matched coupling.

lewis-cain
Download Presentation

MIMO Systems: Myths and Realities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MIMO Systems: Myths and Realities Ralf R. Müller NTNU

  2. Myths Max Weber 1943

  3. Myth 1: In order to get any noticeable MIMO effect, the antennas may not be spaced much closer than half a wavelength. This myth is a result of erroneous antenna matching.

  4. No coupling Matched coupling Mis-matched coupling Wallace & Jensen, IEEE Trans. Wirel. Commun. July 2004.

  5. Myth 2: In order to achieve a diversity gain you need to sacrifice on the multiplexing gain. This myth is a result of excluding temporal diversity.

  6. Zheng & Tse

  7. Myth 3: For high spectral efficiency, one needs amplitude modulation. This mythis a relict of the pre-MIMO era.

  8. What is more expensive? Alternative 1:A linear increase of the number of antennas at the transmitter. Alternative 2:An exponential increase of the voltage the RF-chains have to cope with.

  9. Myth 4: There is a (big) market forsingle user MIMO systems. People (including researchers) like to believe what comforts them.

  10. Myth 5: QPSK always tops BPSK. This mythis an invalid generalization from single-user to multi-user communications.

  11. Myth 6: Intersymbol interference is something one should alwaystry to avoid. This mythis valid on certain single-user SISO channels with Gaussian input, but not in general.

  12. Mazo & Landau

  13. Myth 7: Excess bandwidth like roll-off cannot be utilized. This mythis also an invalid generalization from single-user to multi-user communications.

  14. Cottatellucci et al. Asynchronous multiuser systems have larger (or equal) capacity. The larger the roll-off the larger the gap.

  15. Myth 8: Power Control is a Good Idea to Deal with Near-Far Effects. This mythis the result of commercial interests.

  16. Hanly & Tse

  17. Myth 9: MIMO requires particular codes. This myth is a historical peculiarity.

  18. Sanderovich et al.

  19. Myth 10: Constant envelop modulation can’t be equalized at high data rates. This myth is to be overthrown if MIMO shall become the key to the wireless revolution.

  20. Realities

  21. Antenna Spacing It is textbook knowledge in antenna theory that Bouwkamp and de Bruijn showed as early as 1946 that there is no theoretical limit to the directivity of any given aperture size.

  22. Diversity vs. Multiplexing • Multiplexing gains are expensive. • Diversity almost comes for free. Why should one sacrifice multiplexing for diversity’s sake?

  23. Diversity on Discount Parasitic antennas switch on kHz speeds.

  24. Resource Pooling The antennas of all users are pooled together. There is no need to distinguish between users and antennas.

  25. The Resource Pooling View MIMO is CDMA where the processing gain is provided by antennas.

  26. Amplitude Modulation ?

  27. Space-Time Coding ? There are no multiuser space-time codes. For the downlink, we need efficient dirty-paper codes.

  28. A Fatal Attraction Orthogonality lures by its beauty, but it blinds your reason.  Capacity is achieved by random coding.

  29. ⁄ Amplitude Modulation any number of users

  30. ⁄ Resource Pooling The antennas of all users are pooled together. There is no need to distinguish between users and antennas.

  31. ⁄ Orth. Sanderovich et al.

  32. ⁄ Orth. Cottatellucci et al. Asynchronous multiuser systems have larger (or equal) capacity. The larger the roll-off the larger the gap.

  33. ⁄ Orth. Mazo & Landau

  34. ⁄ Orth. Hanly & Tse

  35. What’s wrong with Orthogonality? capacity = output entropy – constant entropy measures disorder

  36. OrthogonalFDM ? OFDM eases equalization. OFDM prohibits constant envelope modulation like GMSK.

  37. OFDM vs. CPM • Simple equalization • Few antennas • Linear amplifiers • Iterativeequalization • Many antennas • Cheap amplifiers MIMO ... is just an add on... is the enabling tool.

  38. My Personal Vision of MIMO Dozens (hundreds) of closely spaced antennas CPM modulation High diversity order due to parasitic elements Iterative processing of ISI, MUI, and FEC by belief propagation.

More Related