Information Rates and Capacity for Multi-Antenna Cellular Systems with Fading
For the uplink, the dissertation considers a system having a large number of competing users trying to maximize their rate under a peak power constraint. The dissertation proves that the optimal strategy in this non cooperative scenario is for the users to transmit i.i.d PSK inputs at full power. The dissertation then presents an analytic expression for the information rate of the Multi-antenna fading system in the wideband regime. This result is useful for a designer to judge the performance of new coding schemes for the cellular uplink (just like BPSK capacity is useful to evaluate the performance of binary codes on the point-to-point AWGN channel).
For the downlink, this dissertation presents a new paradigm for studying and designing full diversity and high rate codes. In existing literature, space-time coding is presented as a solution to the problem of coding for the downlink when the base station has multiple antennas. The new paradigm operates on a symbol by symbol basis (as opposed to space-time codes which operate on a block of transmitted symbols). The dissertation applies this principle to design spatial modulators schemes for the downlink. The results show that spatial modulators offer a simple elegant design for Multi-antenna systems which performs better than conventional space-time codes in terms of achievable information rates.
History
Date Modified
2017-06-05Defense Date
2011-07-07Research Director(s)
Daniel J. Costello jr.Committee Members
Ken Sauer Thomas Fuja Yih-Fang HuangDegree
- Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Level
- Doctoral Dissertation
Language
- English
Alternate Identifier
etd-07192011-181417Publisher
University of Notre DameAdditional Groups
- Electrical Engineering
Program Name
- Electrical Engineering