Massive MIMO for Next Generation Wireless Systems
Erik G. Larsson, Ove Edfors, Fredrik Tufvesson, Thomas L. Marzetta

TL;DR
Massive MIMO employs a large number of antennas to significantly improve wireless communication throughput, energy efficiency, and robustness, while introducing new challenges in hardware, synchronization, and deployment.
Contribution
This paper provides an overview of the massive MIMO concept, highlighting its advantages, potential, and the new research challenges it introduces compared to traditional multi-user MIMO.
Findings
Massive MIMO can greatly enhance throughput and energy efficiency.
It enables the use of inexpensive low-power components and simplifies MAC layer.
It uncovers new research problems like hardware synchronization and deployment scenarios.
Abstract
Multi-user Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) offers big advantages over conventional point-to-point MIMO: it works with cheap single-antenna terminals, a rich scattering environment is not required, and resource allocation is simplified because every active terminal utilizes all of the time-frequency bins. However, multi-user MIMO, as originally envisioned with roughly equal numbers of service-antennas and terminals and frequency division duplex operation, is not a scalable technology. Massive MIMO (also known as "Large-Scale Antenna Systems", "Very Large MIMO", "Hyper MIMO", "Full-Dimension MIMO" & "ARGOS") makes a clean break with current practice through the use of a large excess of service-antennas over active terminals and time division duplex operation. Extra antennas help by focusing energy into ever-smaller regions of space to bring huge improvements in throughput and…
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