Achieving "Massive MIMO" Spectral Efficiency with a Not-so-Large Number of Antennas
Hoon Huh, Giuseppe Caire, Haralabos C. Papadopoulos, and Sean A., Ramprashad

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel network-MIMO TDD architecture that achieves spectral efficiencies comparable to Massive MIMO but with significantly fewer antennas per user, using clustering, precoding, and scheduling strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a mixed-mode network-MIMO scheme with user binning and large-system analysis to reduce antenna requirements while maintaining high spectral efficiency.
Findings
Spectral efficiency similar to Massive MIMO with 10 times fewer antennas.
Large-system analysis matches finite-dimensional simulation results.
Effective user binning and scheduling optimize network utility.
Abstract
The main focus and contribution of this paper is a novel network-MIMO TDD architecture that achieves spectral efficiencies comparable with "Massive MIMO", with one order of magnitude fewer antennas per active user per cell. The proposed architecture is based on a family of network-MIMO schemes defined by small clusters of cooperating base stations, zero-forcing multiuser MIMO precoding with suitable inter-cluster interference constraints, uplink pilot signals reuse across cells, and frequency reuse. The key idea consists of partitioning the users population into geographically determined "bins", such that all users in the same bin are statistically equivalent, and use the optimal network-MIMO architecture in the family for each bin. A scheduler takes care of serving the different bins on the time-frequency slots, in order to maximize a desired network utility function that captures some…
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