On capacity of wireless ad hoc networks with MIMO MMSE receivers
Jing Ma, Ying Jun Zhang

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the capacity of MIMO ad-hoc networks by considering the actual physical layer interference, moving beyond the single-antenna assumption, and deriving the SINR distribution to guide medium access protocol design.
Contribution
It introduces a novel capacity analysis for MIMO ad-hoc networks that accounts for multiple antennas and actual interference, unlike previous models.
Findings
Derived the probability distribution of post-detection SINR.
Characterized the spatial resource occupation by links based on interference.
Provided guidelines for medium access protocol design.
Abstract
Widely adopted at home, business places, and hot spots, wireless ad-hoc networks are expected to provide broadband services parallel to their wired counterparts in near future. To address this need, MIMO techniques, which are capable of offering several-fold increase in capacity, hold significant promise. Most previous work on capacity analysis of ad-hoc networks is based on an implicit assumption that each node has only one antenna. Core to the analysis therein is the characterization of a geometric area, referred to as the exclusion region, which quantizes the amount of spatial resource occupied by a link. When multiple antennas are deployed at each node, however, multiple links can transmit in the vicinity of each other simultaneously, as interference can now be suppressed by spatial signal processing. As such, a link no longer exclusively occupies a geometric area, making the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding · Advanced Wireless Network Optimization
