Rate-Splitting Multiple Access for Downlink Multi-Antenna Communications: Physical Layer Design and Link-level Simulations
Onur Dizdar, Yijie Mao, Wei Han, Bruno Clerckx

TL;DR
This paper designs the physical layer of Rate-Splitting Multiple Access (RSMA) for downlink multi-antenna systems, demonstrating through simulations that RSMA significantly outperforms traditional schemes like SDMA and NOMA in throughput.
Contribution
It introduces the first physical layer design for RSMA, incorporating modulation, coding, message splitting, and SIC, validated by link-level simulations.
Findings
RSMA achieves higher throughput than SDMA and NOMA.
Physical layer design enhances RSMA's practical implementation.
Simulations confirm robustness and efficiency of RSMA.
Abstract
Rate-Splitting Multiple Access (RSMA) is an emerging flexible, robust and powerful multiple access scheme for downlink multi-antenna wireless networks. RSMA relies on multi-antenna Rate-Splitting (RS) strategies at the transmitter and Successive Interference Cancellation (SIC) at the receivers, and has the unique ability to partially decode interference and partially treat interference as noise so as to softly bridge the two extremes of fully decoding interference (as in Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access, NOMA) and treating interference as noise (as in Space Division Multiple Access, SDMA or Multi-User Multiple-Input Multiple-Output, MU-MIMO). RSMA has been shown to provide significant room for spectral efficiency, energy efficiency, Quality-of-Service enhancements, robustness to Channel State Information (CSI) imperfections, as well as feedback overhead and complexity reduction, in a wide…
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