1-Bit Massive MIMO Transmission: Embracing Interference with Symbol-Level Precoding
Ang Li, Christos Masouros, A. Lee Swindlehurst, Wei Yu

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in 1-bit massive MIMO systems, focusing on symbol-level precoding that exploits interference to improve error rates while reducing hardware complexity and power consumption.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of constructive interference in 1-bit massive MIMO and discusses novel precoding solutions that leverage interference for enhanced performance.
Findings
Exploiting interference improves error rates in 1-bit MIMO.
Symbol-level precoding enables hardware-efficient massive MIMO.
Constructive interference can be used to mitigate hardware imperfections.
Abstract
The deployment of large-scale antenna arrays for cellular base stations (BSs), termed as `Massive MIMO', has been a key enabler for meeting the ever-increasing capacity requirement for 5G communication systems and beyond. Despite their promising performance, fully-digital massive MIMO systems require a vast amount of hardware components including radio frequency chains, power amplifiers, digital-to-analog converters (DACs), etc., resulting in a huge increase in terms of the total power consumption and hardware costs for cellular BSs. Towards both spectrally-efficient and energy-efficient massive MIMO deployment, a number of hardware limited architectures have been proposed, including hybrid analog-digital structures, constant-envelope transmission, and use of low-resolution DACs. In this paper, we overview the recent interest in improving the error-rate performance of massive MIMO…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Antenna Design and Analysis · Energy Harvesting in Wireless Networks
