Channel Hardening of IRS-Aided Multi-Antenna Systems: How Should IRSs Scale?
Ali Bereyhi, Saba Asaad, Chongjun Ouyang, Ralf R. M\"uller, and Rafael F. Schaefer, H. Vincent Poor

TL;DR
This paper rigorously proves that large IRS-aided MIMO systems exhibit channel hardening, with capacity converging to a Gaussian distribution as IRS size increases, enabling reduced transmitter complexity for target performance.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical proof of channel hardening in large IRS-aided MIMO systems and characterizes the capacity distribution and dimensional trade-offs.
Findings
Channel capacity converges to a Gaussian distribution with zero variance as IRS size grows.
The capacity distribution matches analytical predictions even in practical scenarios.
Larger IRSs reduce the number of transmit antennas needed for target performance.
Abstract
Unlike active array antennas, intelligent reflecting surfaces (IRSs) are efficiently implemented at large dimensions. This allows for traceable realizations of large-scale IRS-aided MIMO systems in which not necessarily the array antennas, but the passive IRSs are large. It is widely believed that large IRS-aided MIMO settings maintain the fundamental features of massive MIMO systems, and hence they are the implementationally feasible technology for establishing the performance of large-scale MIMO settings. This work gives a rigorous proof to this belief. We show that using a large passive IRS, the end-to-end MIMO channel between the transmitter and the receiver always hardens, even if the IRS elements are strongly correlated. For the fading direct and reflection links between the transmitter and the receiver, our derivations demonstrate that as the number of IRS elements grows large,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Wireless Communication Technologies · Antenna Design and Analysis · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies
