• DocumentCode
    64404
  • Title

    An Uplink Capacity Analysis of the Distributed Antenna System (DAS): From Cellular DAS to DAS with Virtual Cells

  • Author

    Lin Dai

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electron. Eng., City Univ. of Hong Kong, Kowloon, China
  • Volume
    13
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    May-14
  • Firstpage
    2717
  • Lastpage
    2731
  • Abstract
    Performance of cellular networks is severely limited by intense inter-cell interference due to aggressive frequency reuse among cells. How to characterize the dependency of inter-cell interference on positions of BS antennas and users is a key question for the capacity analysis of cellular systems, which unfortunately remains elusive. In this paper, a comparative study on the uplink ergodic sum capacity of cellular systems is presented, where Lc BS antennas are either co-located at the cell center or uniformly distributed within each cell. With a large number of users, the inter-cell interference density is shown to be inversely proportional to Lc if the co-located antenna (CA) layout is adopted. With the distributed antenna (DA) layout, it scales in the order of Lc-α/2, where α is the path-loss factor, and is much lower than that in the CA case when Lc is large. Substantial gains on the uplink sum capacity are achieved by the DA layout thanks to the reduction of inter-cell interference level. The analysis also reveals that the inter-cell interference density of each BS antenna is sensitive to its position. With the DA layout, BS antennas at cell boundary areas suffer from much higher inter-cell interference than those at the cell center, which may exacerbate the performance disparity of users in cellular systems. To tackle the cell-edge problem, a distributed antenna system (DAS) is further considered, where L BS antennas are distributed over a wide area, and each user chooses V ≪ L surrounding BS antennas as its virtual cell, i.e., its own serving BS antenna set. A uniform inter-cell interference density is shown to be achieved thanks to the adaptive formation of virtual cells. More importantly, by the use of virtual cell, the number of users served by each BS antenna decreases with an increasing L, implying that much of the signal processing and information exchange can be performed i- a local and distributed way. The uplink ergodic sum capacity and the ergodic rate with orthogonal access of DASs with V=1 are further derived, and shown to be close to each other even with a large L. It is in sharp contrast to cellular systems where a significant tradeoff between performance and complexity has to be made when the number of BS antennas is large.
  • Keywords
    MIMO communication; adjacent channel interference; antenna arrays; cellular radio; frequency allocation; statistical mechanics; BS antennas; DA-with-virtual cells; aggressive frequency reuse; cell-edge problem; cellular DAS; cellular networks; colocated antenna layout; distributed antenna system; information exchange; intercell interference dependency; multiple-input-multiple-output theory; path-loss factor; signal processing; uniform intercell interference density; uplink ergodic sum capacity analysis; Antenna arrays; Fading; Interference; Layout; Uplink; Vectors; Distributed antenna systems; cellular systems; inter-cell interference; multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO); uplink sum capacity;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1536-1276
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TWC.2014.033114.130557
  • Filename
    6783666