DocumentCode
1115802
Title
Optimization of Training and Scheduling in the Non-Coherent SIMO Multiple Access Channel
Author
Murugesan, Sugumar ; Uysal-Biyikoglu, Elif ; Schniter, Philip
Author_Institution
Ohio State Univ., Columbus
Volume
25
Issue
7
fYear
2007
fDate
9/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1446
Lastpage
1456
Abstract
Channel state information (CSI) is important for achieving large rates in MIMO channels. However, in time-varying MIMO channels, there is a tradeoff between the time/energy spent acquiring channel state information (CSI) and the time/energy remaining for data transmission. This tradeoff is accentuated in the MIMO multiple access channel (MAC), since the number of channel vectors to be estimated increases with the number of users. Furthermore, the problem of acquiring CSI is tightly coupled with the problem of exploiting CSI through multiuser scheduling. This paper considers a block-fading MAC with coherence time T, n uncoordinated users-each with one transmit antenna and the same average power constraint, and a base station with M receive antennas and no a priori CSI. For this scenario, a training-based communication scheme is proposed and the training and multiuser-scheduling aspects of the scheme are jointly optimized. In the high-SNR regime, the sum capacity of the non-coherent SIMO MAC is characterized and used to establish the SNR-scaling-law optimality of the proposed scheme. In the low-SNR regime, the sum-rate of the proposed scheme is found to decay linearly with vanishing SNR when flash signaling is incorporated. Furthermore, this linear decay is shown to be order-optimal through comparison to the low-SNR sum capacity of the non-coherent SIMO MAC. A by product of these SNR-asymptotic analyses is the observation that non-trivial scheduling (i.e., scheduling a strict subset of trained users) is advantageous at low SNR, but not at high SNR. The sum-rate and per-user throughput are also explored in the large-n and large-M regimes. Non-coherent capacity, training, multiple access channel, multiuser scheduling, opportunistic scheduling.
Keywords
MIMO communication; fading channels; multiuser channels; receiving antennas; transmitting antennas; block-fading MAC; channel state information; flash signaling; linear decay; multiuser-scheduling aspects; noncoherent SIMO multiple access channel; nontrivial scheduling; opportunistic scheduling; receive antennas; training-based communication scheme; transmit antenna; Base stations; Channel state information; Couplings; Data communication; MIMO; Receiving antennas; Robustness; Throughput; Transmitters; Transmitting antennas;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0733-8716
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSAC.2007.070917
Filename
4299614
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