Title :
60 GHz Spatial Radio Transmission: Multiplexing or Beamforming?
Author :
Haneda, Katsuyuki ; Gustafson, Carl ; Wyne, Shurjeel
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. Eng., SMARAD Centre of Excellence, Aalto Univ., Espoo, Finland
Abstract :
This paper compares the capacity improvement capability of spatial multiplexing and beamforming techniques for 60 GHz spatial transmissions in a multi-carrier radio system such as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing. The term beamforming in this paper refers to the conventional gain focusing, for the strongest propagation path, by narrow antenna beams. Our channel capacity metric depends only on the multipath richness of the propagation channel and the antenna aperture size, but is otherwise independent of the realization of antenna elements on the aperture. Our analysis also reveals the spatial degrees-of-freedom (SDoF) of the radio channel, which is the maximum number of antenna elements on the aperture for efficient spatial multiplexing. We evaluate the capacity and SDoF of single-polarized 60 GHz radio channels measured in an office environment. Our results show that the radio channel offers multiple SDoFs both in line-of-sight (LOS) and non-LOS (NLOS) scenarios such that spatial multiplexing can improve the channel capacity, provided that the receive signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is sufficiently high to utilize them. Under -10 dBm of the transmit power, the high receive SNR is guaranteed when the antenna aperture size is larger than 1λ2 in LOS and 9λ2 in NLOS scenarios, respectively.
Keywords :
OFDM modulation; beam steering; channel capacity; multipath channels; wireless channels; antenna aperture size; antenna elements; beamforming techniques; channel capacity metric; frequency 60 GHz; gain focusing; line-of-sight; multicarrier radio system; multipath richness; narrow antenna beams; office environment; orthogonal frequency division multiplexing; propagation channel; propagation path; radio channels; receive signal-to-noise ratio; spatial degrees-of-freedom; spatial multiplexing; transmit power; Antenna measurements; Antenna radiation patterns; Aperture antennas; Channel capacity; Multiplexing; Beam steering; MIMO systems; millimeter-wave communication;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2013.2279091