An Overview of Massive MIMO Research at the University of Bristol

May 22, 2017 ยท The Cartographer ยท ๐Ÿ› arXiv.org

๐Ÿ“š THE CARTOGRAPHER: The Cartographer
Survey/review paper โ€” maps the landscape rather than implementing a method.

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"Title-pattern auto-detect: An Overview of Massive MIMO Research at the University of Bristol"

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Authors Paul Harris, Wael Boukley Hasan, Henry Brice, Benny Chitambira, Mark Beach, Evangelos Mellios, Andrew Nix, Simon Armour, Angela Doufexi arXiv ID 1705.07540 Category cs.IT: Information Theory Citations 19 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 2 days ago
Abstract
Massive MIMO has rapidly gained popularity as a technology crucial to the capacity advances required for 5G wireless systems. Since its theoretical conception six years ago, research activity has grown exponentially, and there is now a developing industrial interest to commercialise the technology. For this to happen effectively, we believe it is crucial that further pragmatic research is conducted with a view to establish how reality differs from theoretical ideals. This paper presents an overview of the massive MIMO research activities occurring within the Communication Systems & Networks Group at the University of Bristol centred around our 128-antenna real-time testbed, which has been developed through the BIO programmable city initiative in collaboration with NI and Lund University. Through recent preliminary trials, we achieved a world first spectral efficiency of 79.4 bits/s/Hz, and subsequently demonstrated that this could be increased to 145.6 bits/s/Hz. We provide a summary of this work here along with some of our ongoing research directions such as large-scale array wave-front analysis, optimised power control and localisation techniques.
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