Favorable Propagation Studies for Massive MIMO Systems
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Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Abstract
Massive MIMO (multiple-input multiple-output) is a key technology for 5G/6G networks.
Its main advantages lies in enhanced spectral/energy efficiency and simplified processing
in multi-user scenarios. These benefi ts are attributed to a phenomenon known as favorable
propagation (FP). In this thesis, we study the asymptotic FP (as the number N of antennas
increases without bound) for various scenarios and array con gurations. In particular,
we establish the asymptotic FP for uniform circular/cylindrical arrays under fixed element
spacing. To do so, a novel technique is developed based on a Bessel series expansion.
The impact of grating lobes (GL) on the asymptotic FP of uniform linear/planar arrays
is analyzed. A novel design of non-uniform linear arrays, based on subarray structure, is
proposed to eliminate the impact of GL. This approach is robust in the frequency domain
and is applicable to wideband systems. The impact of location and phase errors on favorable
propagation is studied. It is shown that the asymptotic FP holds for perturbed
arrays if and only if it holds for the unperturbed ones, for any i.i.d distribution of nite
variance. While errors have negligible asymptotic effects, they significantly affect the rate
of convergence with N: it slows down from 1=N2 (no errors) to 1=N (with errors), so that
more antennas are needed in the later case to attain high SINR. Next, we consider nonasymptotic scenario and to reduce the array complexity, minimize the number of antennas
subject to SINR constraints. Despite the non-convex nature of resulting optimization problems,
globally optimal closed-form solutions are obtained. The number of antennas can
be reduced by almost 50% if variable antenna spacing is allowed compared to the fixed
spacing of half a wavelength.
