Two-Stage Distributed Beamforming Design in Cell-Free Massive MIMO ISAC Systems
Leonardo Leyva, Daniel Castanheira, Ad\~ao Silva, At\'ilio Gameiro

TL;DR
This paper proposes a two-stage distributed beamforming method for cell-free MIMO ISAC systems that reduces fronthaul load while maintaining high communication and sensing performance.
Contribution
It introduces a novel distributed beamforming design using a majorization-minimization approach to improve scalability and efficiency in CF ISAC networks.
Findings
Achieves comparable performance to centralized methods.
Substantially reduces fronthaul load.
Enhances scalability of CF MIMO ISAC systems.
Abstract
Integrating radio-sensing functionalities into future cell-free (CF) wireless networks promises efficient resource utilization and facilitates the seamless roll-out of applications such as public safety and smart infrastructure. While the beamforming design problem for the CF integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) paradigm has been addressed in the literature, existing methods rely on centralized signal processing, leading to fronthaul load and scalability issues. This paper presents a two-stage beamforming design for the CF ISAC paradigm, aiming to significantly reduce the fronthaul load by distributing the signal processing tasks between the central unit (CU) and the access points (APs). The design optimizes the sum signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) for communication users, subject to per-AP power constraints and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) requirements for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntenna Design and Analysis · Advanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Wireless Body Area Networks
