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Adaptive Massive MIMO for fast moving connected vehicles:
It will work with Predictor Antennas!
Dinh-Thuy Phan-Huy
, Orange Labs, Paris,
Stefan Wesemann
, Nokia Bell Labs, Stuttgart,
Joachim Björsell
, Uppsala University, and
Mikael Sternad
, Uppsala University.
22th International Workshop on Smart Antennas (WSA2018)
, Bochum, Germany, March 2018.
Paper In Pdf
Presentation slides
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Abstract:
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Predicting the channel between a massive multiple
input multiple output antenna and a car is a challenge, due to the
short-term fading. It becomes essentially impossible by
conventional extrapolation from past estimates if the car has
moved by half a wavelength or more in space at the time when
the channel estimate will be needed. This problem would prevent
us from using the best fifth generation adaptive antenna
downlink precoding schemes for very fast moving connected
vehicles.
A potential solution is to add another vehicle antenna, a
“predictor antenna”, which senses the channel in advance. In this
paper, based on drive tests and channel measurements from a 64-
element antenna to a car, we for the first time show that this
concept works for massive MIMO downlinks.
Thanks to the use
of a predictor antenna, the complex OFDM downlink channels
can be predicted with an accuracy that enables maximum ratio
transmit beamforming with close to ideal beamforming gain for
non-line-of-sight channels.
Zero forcing transmission to two users
results in a signal-to-interference ratio of 20 dB to 30 dB when
predicting non-line-of-sight channels up to three wavelengths
ahead in space.
These first experiment shows that the predictor
antenna concept is a potential solution to make fifth generation
adaptive antennas work for very fast moving connected vehicles.
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Related publications:
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Paper at IEEE PIMRC 2017
on the on-line algorithm and performance
of prediction antennas based on measured channels.
Paper at IEEE ICC 2017
that provides the statistical
estimate of the prediction accuracy.
Paper at IEEE WCNC 2012, Original proposal for using "Predictor antennas"
for long-range prediction of fast fading for moving relays.
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Conference paper at EUCAP 2014
presenting compensation of antenna coupling.
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IEEE Intelligent Transportation Systems Magazine 2015:
Making 5G adaptive antennas work for very fast moving vehicles.
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Paper at Globecom 2016 5G Workshop
on the gain by predictor antennas
in terms of spectral efficiency and power efficiency
when serving connected vehicles
by 5G Massive MIMO antennas.
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Channel Estimation and Prediction for 5G Applications.
PhD Thesis by Rikke Apelfröjd, Uppsala University 2018.
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Channel Estimation and Prediction for MIMO OFDM Systems.
PhD Thesis by Danel Aronsson, Uppsala University 2011.
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Prediction of Mobile Radio Channels.
PhD Thesis by Torbjörn Ekman, Uppsala University 2002.
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Main
entry in list of publications
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4G and 5G wireless research
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Channel prediction
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