(n,K)-user Interference Channels: Degrees of Freedom
Ali Tajer, Xiaodong Wang

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that in large multiuser interference networks, opportunistic and dynamic selection of active user pairs can significantly increase degrees of freedom, even without transmit-side channel state information.
Contribution
It introduces a scaling law for network size that enables higher degrees of freedom through opportunistic user selection without requiring channel state information at transmitters.
Findings
Degrees of freedom per active pair is 0.5 with CSI and finite n.
In dense networks, degrees of freedom can approach K with proper scaling.
Opportunistic user selection allows higher degrees of freedom without CSI.
Abstract
We analyze the gains of opportunistic communication in multiuser interference channels. Consider a fully connected -user Gaussian interference channel. At each time instance only transmitters are allowed to be communicating with their respective receivers and the remaining transmitter-receiver pairs remain inactive. For finite , if the transmitters can acquire channel state information (CSI) and if all channel gains are bounded away from zero and infinity, the seminal results on interference alignment establish that for any {\em arbitrary} active pairs the total number of spatial degrees of freedom per orthogonal time and frequency domain is . Also it is noteworthy that without transmit-side CSI the interference channel becomes interference-limited and the degrees of freedom is 0. In {\em dense} networks (), however, as the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCooperative Communication and Network Coding · Wireless Communication Security Techniques · Advanced MIMO Systems Optimization
