Is NOMA Efficient in Multi-Antenna Networks? A Critical Look at Next Generation Multiple Access Techniques
Bruno Clerckx, Yijie Mao, Robert Schober, Eduard Jorswieck, David J., Love, Jinhong Yuan, Lajos Hanzo, Geoffrey Ye Li, Erik G. Larsson, and, Giuseppe Caire

TL;DR
This paper critically evaluates multi-antenna NOMA, revealing its inefficiencies and limitations compared to MULP and RS, and emphasizes that NOMA is generally not suitable for multi-antenna deployments.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis contrasting NOMA with MULP and RS, clarifying misconceptions and highlighting the inefficiencies of NOMA in multi-antenna systems.
Findings
NOMA is inefficient in multi-antenna settings due to multiplexing gain loss.
NOMA incurs higher complexity with limited performance benefits.
RS outperforms NOMA in exploiting multiplexing gains in multi-antenna networks.
Abstract
In this paper, we take a critical and fresh look at the downlink multi-antenna NOMA literature. Instead of contrasting NOMA with OMA, we contrast NOMA with two other baselines. The first is conventional Multi-User Linear Precoding (MULP). The second is Rate-Splitting Multiple Access (RSMA) based on multi-antenna Rate-Splitting (RS) and SIC. We show that there is some confusion about the benefits of NOMA, and we dispel the associated misconceptions. First, we highlight why NOMA is inefficient in multi-antenna settings based on basic multiplexing gain analysis. We stress that the issue lies in how the NOMA literature has been hastily applied to multi-antenna setups, resulting in a misuse of spatial dimensions and therefore loss in multiplexing gains and rate. Second, we show that NOMA incurs a severe multiplexing gain loss despite an increased receiver complexity due to an inefficient use…
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