Title :
Near-Capacity Wireless Transceivers and Cooperative Communications in the MIMO Era: Evolution of Standards, Waveform Design, and Future Perspectives
Author :
Hanzo, Lajos ; El-Hajjar, Mohammed ; Alamri, Osamah
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electron. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Southampton, Southampton, UK
Abstract :
Classic Shannon theory suggests that the achievable channel capacity increases logarithmically with the transmit power. By contrast, the MIMO capacity increases linearly with the number of transmit antennas, provided that the number of receive antennas is equal to the number of transmit antennas. With the further proviso that the total transmit power is increased proportionately to the number of transmit antennas, a linear capacity increase is achieved upon increasing the transmit power, which justifies the spectacular success of MIMOs. Hence we may argue that MIMO-aided transceivers and their cooperation-assisted distributed or virtual MIMO counterparts constitute power-efficient solutions. In a nutshell, since the conception of GSM in excess of three orders of magnitude bit-rate improvements were achieved in three decades, which corresponds to about a factor ten for each decade, because GSM had a data rate of 9.6 Kb/s, while HSDPA is capable of communicating at 13.7 Mb/s. However, the possible transmit power reductions remained more limited, even when using the most advanced multistage iterative detectors, since the required received signal power has not been reduced by as much as 30 dB. This plausible observation motivates the further research of advanced cooperation-aided wireless MIMO transceivers, as detailed in this treatise.
Keywords :
MIMO communication; cellular radio; channel capacity; cooperative communication; iterative methods; radio transceivers; receiving antennas; transmitting antennas; waveform analysis; GSM; MIMO capacity; MIMO era; MIMO-aided transceivers; Shannon theory; channel capacity; cooperation-aided wireless MIMO transceivers; cooperation-assisted distributed MIMO counterparts; cooperative communications; linear capacity; magnitude bit-rate improvements; multistage iterative detectors; near-capacity wireless transceivers; number; plausible observation; receive antennas; received signal power; spectacular success; standards evolution; transmit antennas; transmit power reductions; virtual MIMO counterparts; waveform design; GSM; MIMO; Mobile communication; Multiaccess communication; Signal to noise ratio; Transceivers; 2G; 3G; 4G; CDMA; EXIT chart; MIMO; OFDM; distributed MIMO; iterative detection; near-capacity systems; noncoherent detection; transceiver design; virtual MIMO; wireless standards;
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/JPROC.2011.2148150