Author_Institution :
RF DSP Inc., Irvine, CA, USA
Abstract :
Massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems, dense small-cells (SCs), and full duplex are three candidate techniques for next-generation communication systems. The cooperation of next-generation techniques could offer more benefits, e.g., SC in-band wireless backhaul in massive MIMO systems. In this paper, three strategies of SC in-band wireless backhaul in massive MIMO systems are introduced and compared, i.e., complete time-division duplex (CTDD), zero-division duplex (ZDD), and ZDD with interference rejection (ZDD-IR). Simulation results demonstrate that SC in-band wireless backhaul has the potential to improve the throughput for massive MIMO systems. Specifically, among the three strategies, CTDD is the simplest one and could achieve decent throughput improvement. Depending on conditions, with the self-interference cancellation capability at SCs, ZDD could achieve better throughput than CTDD, even with residual self-interference. Moreover, ZDD-IR requires the additional interference rejection process at the BS compared to ZDD, but it could generally achieve better throughput than CTDD and ZDD.
Keywords :
MIMO communication; cellular radio; interference suppression; next generation networks; radiofrequency interference; CTDD; ZDD-IR; complete time-division duplex; interference rejection process; massive MIMO systems; massive multiple-input multiple-output systems; next-generation communication systems; self-interference cancellation capability; small cell in-band wireless backhaul; throughput improvement; zero-division duplex; Antennas; Downlink; MIMO; Throughput; Time-frequency analysis; Uplink; Wireless communication; Full duplex; Massive MIMO; Small cells; Wire-less in-band backhaul; full duplex; small cells; wireless in-band backhaul;