Title :
Spatial Degrees of Freedom of Large Distributed MIMO Systems and Wireless Ad Hoc Networks
Author :
Ozgur, Ayfer ; Leveque, Olivier ; Tse, David
Author_Institution :
Packard Electr. Eng., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
Abstract :
We consider a large distributed MIMO system where wireless users with single transmit and receive antenna cooperate in clusters to form distributed transmit and receive antenna arrays. We characterize how the capacity of the distributed MIMO transmission scales with the number of cooperating users, the area of the clusters and the separation between them, in a line-of-sight propagation environment. We use this result to answer the following question: can distributed MIMO provide significant capacity gain over traditional multi-hop in large ad hoc networks with n source-destination pairs randomly distributed over an area A? Two diametrically opposite answers [24] and [26] have emerged in the current literature. We show that neither of these two results are universal and their validity depends on V the relation between the number of users n and √A/λ, which we identify as the spatial degrees of freedom in the network. λ is the carrier wavelength. When √A/λ ≥ n, there are n degrees of freedom in the network and distributed MIMO with hierarchical cooperation can achieve a capacity scaling linearly in n as in [24], while capacity of multihop scales only as √n. On the other hand, when √A/λ ≤ √n as in [26], there are only √n degrees of freedom in the network and they can be readily achieved by multihop. Our results also reveal a third regime where √n ≤ √A/λ ≤ n. Here, the number of degrees of freedom are smaller than n but larger than what can be achieved by multi-hop. We construct scaling optimal architectures for this intermediate regime.
Keywords :
MIMO communication; ad hoc networks; antenna arrays; receiving antennas; transmitters; carrier wavelength; cooperating users; distributed MIMO systems; distributed receive antenna arrays; distributed transmit antenna arrays; hierarchical cooperation; line-of-sight propagation environment; multihop scale capacity; single receive antenna; single transmit antenna; source-destination pairs; spatial degrees of freedom; wireless ad hoc networks; Ad hoc networks; Antenna arrays; Approximation methods; MIMO; Receiving antennas; Wireless networks; Spatial degrees of freedom; distributed MIMO; hierarchical cooperation; large scale MIMO; linear capacity scaling; multi-user MIMO; virtual MIMO; wireless ad hoc networks;
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
DOI :
10.1109/JSAC.2013.130209