The present invention relates to a method and system for transmitting data in a downlink multiple-user multiple-input multiple-output (DL MU-MIMO) communication system, and in particular to the generation of precoders for use in optimising transmission capacity between an eNodeB and UEs (user equipments) in such a communication system.
In a DL MU-MIMO system the eNodeB transmits data to different UEs on the same time-frequency resources from multiple transmit antennas. To minimise interference between UEs, the eNodeB creates transmission beams through precoding. At the receiving site, a UE uses post-coding (decoding) to take (decode) its data.
In the DL MU-MIMO system, also the eNodeB can transmit different data to one UE on the same time-frequency resources from multiple transmit antennas. The number of the data for one UE is defined as rank.
In communication systems, feedback about the status of the downlink channel between a transmitter and a receiver is employed in order to optimise transmission of data over the downlink channel. The receiver determines the downlink channel status information (CSI) from received pilot signals, and then communicates this CSI to the transmitter, or UE determines the downlink CSI from received pilot signals, and then communicates this CSI to eNodeB, for use in altering the rank, precoding matrices, coding rate and modulation scheme for downlink transmission used in subsequent data transmissions. In 3GPP TS36.213 (V10.5.0), the channel status information includes rank indication (RI), precoding matrix indicator (PMI), and channel quality indicator (CQI). PMI and RI are used for DL MIMO systems.
Current techniques used in MU-MIMO systems for precoding are not optimal when the CSI used to alter the precoding matrices are not orthogonal between the paired or among the grouped UEs and eNodeB applies non orthogonal precoding matrices between the paired or among the grouped UEs. Such as PMIs are not orthogonal between the paired or among the grouped UEs and eNodeB applies the PMIs. There currently exists a need to improve MU-MIMO communication system precoding performance in such cases.
With this in mind, one aspect of the invention provides a method of generating precoders for use in optimising transmission capacity between an eNodeB and a UE in a MU-MIMO communication system.
This method includes the steps of:
receiving a reported precoding matrix indicator (PMI) from the UE;
computing correlation values between pairs of precoding matrices (PMs) of the reported PMIs;
selecting a PM pair having a minimum correlation value;
if the minimum correlation value is less than a lower threshold, using a PM corresponding to the received PMI; and
if the minimum correlation value is greater than the lower threshold and less than an upper threshold,
i) computing correlation values of the reported PMI and the channel matrices (CMs) from a fixed code book of representative CMs,
ii) selecting a CM pair having a maximum correlation value; and
iii) computing precoders from the selected CM pair.
Advantageously, a method including these steps enables the generation of optimised precoders without requiring the reported PMIs transmitted from the UE to the eNodeB to be orthogonal. Joint transmit and receive optimisation is therefore obtained without channel state information, but rather is based upon the PMI feedback information transmitted by the UE.
In one of more embodiments of the invention, the step of computing precoders from the selected CM pair includes:
iteratively computing the precoders based on postcoders and then computing the postcoders based on the precoders until a convergent threshold is achieved.
In one of more embodiments of the invention, the step of iteratively computing the precoders includes
a. initializing the postcoders;
b. computing the precoders based on the available postcoders and the computed Lagrange multiplier;
c. computing the postcoders based on the precomputed precoders and the estimated noise variance; and
d. computing the convergent as the total squared difference between the postcoders at the current iteration and the postcoders at the previous iteration and stopping if the convergent is less than a threshold or otherwise repeating b. onwards.
In one of more embodiments of the invention, the method further includes an initialisation process including:
setting up a minimum Lagrange value and a maximum Lagrange value; and
computing a singular value decomposition of the CM and postcoder by:
In one of more embodiments of the invention, the method further includes the iterative steps of:
e. computing the value of the Lagrange multiplier as the average of the min and the max values;
f. computing the estimated power as a function of the singular values and the Lagrange multiplier; and
g. computing the convergent as the squared difference between the estimated power and the power and stopping if the convergent is less than a threshold or otherwise assigning
and then returning to step e.
In one or more embodiments, computing the noise variance is based on the reported CQI according to the following steps:
It will be appreciated that reference herein to any matter which is given as prior art is not to be taken as an admission that that matter was, in Australia or elsewhere, known or that the information it contains was part of the common general knowledge of a skilled address at the priority date of the claims forming part of this specification.
Referring now to
The eNodeB modulates and encodes data desired to be transmitted to the UEs 14 and 16. Code words generated from the modulation and encoding are mapped to data transmission layers. Accordingly, data is transmitted from the eNodeB 12 to UEs 14 and 16.
The use of multiple transmit and receive antennas in the MIMO communication system 10 enables the eNodeB 12 to encode and transmit data on a number of spatial channels independently, possibly with different rates. Each transmit and receive antenna pair creates a different radio-antenna chain through which data may be transmitted. The precoding matrices applied at the eNodeB enable increased throughput of the multiple layers by the UEs 14 and 16.
Each UE 14 and 16 computes noise power estimates, signal power estimates and channel estimates between the eNodeB 12 and that UE. The computed estimates are used to determine preferred coding matrix index (PMI) data, rank data and channel quality indicator (CQI) data for transmission to the eNodeB 12 to be used for modulation encoding, mapping and precoding so as to optimise transmission capacity between the eNodeB 12 and the UEs. In this context, “rank” is the preferred number of layers used for transmission, “precoding matrix index” (PMI) is the index of the preferred coding matrix in a rank R-associated sub code book where the eNodeB 12 pre-multiplies its signal by the precoding matrix corresponding to this index for improved transmission. The “channel quality indicator” (CQI) for each of the code words consists of the following information:
a) coding rate, or equivalently, transport block size (TBS);
b) modulation scheme (MS) including QPSK, 16 QAM, 64 QAM;
c) preferred subbands for code words to be mapped.
In other words, to minimise interference between UEs, the eNodeB creates transmission beams through precoding. At the receiving site, a UE uses post coding (decoding) to identify data intended for that UE.
Mathematically, a MU-MIMO system is described as follows:
where:
y(i) is the received signal vector of size NRX×1 at the i-th user,
x(i) is the data signal vector of size RI(i)×1 for the i-th user,
H(i) is the channel matrix of size NRX×NTX at the i-th user,
V(i) is the precoder matrix of size NTX×RI(i) for the i-the user,
n(i) is the additive white Gaussian noise vector of size NRX×1 at the i-th user.
Here
NRX is the number of receive antennas at the UE
NTX is the number of transmit antennas at the eNodeB
RI(i) is the rank or number of transmit layers for the i-th user
NUE is the number of users being scheduled
As depicted in
The correlation values are then calculated, and the minimum value determined; as follows:
C
corr(i,j)=tr{[WH({circumflex over (p)}(i))W({circumflex over (p)}(j))]H[WH({circumflex over (p)}(i))W({circumflex over (p)}(j))]}i=1, . . . ,φ−1,j=i+1, . . . ,φ [Math. 2]
where:
W({circumflex over (p)}(i)) denotes the precoder matrix corresponding to the reported PMI {circumflex over (p)}(i) of the i-th UE from the standard LTE codebook (i=1, . . . , φ).
ΩH the fixed codebook of representative channel matrices (CM)
Tmin the Correlation Min threshold.
Tmax the Correlation Max threshold.
Next, a PM pair having a minimum correlation value is determined at step 42 as follows:
C
corr(ĩ,{tilde over (j)})=min{Ccorr(i,j)},
(ĩ,{tilde over (j)})=argmin{Ccorr(i,j)}. [Math. 3]
If the minimum correlation is less than a lower threshold a PM corresponding to the received PMI is then used at step 44, as follows: [Math. 4]
If Ccorr(ĩ,{tilde over (j)})<Tmin then assign the reported PMs as precoders
V({tilde over (i)})=W({circumflex over (p)}({tilde over (i)})),
V({tilde over (j)})=W({circumflex over (p)}({tilde over (j)})).
If the minimum correlation is greater than a predetermined maximum, no users are selected for scheduling at step 46.
However, if the minimum correlation value is greater than the lower threshold and less than the upper threshold, then at step 48, correlation values of the reported PMI and channel matrices (CMs) from a fixed code book 50 of representative CMs are computed. At step 50, a pair of CMs having a maximum correlation value is selected, prior to computation at step 52 of the precoders from the selected CM pair.
Accordingly, the following computations are performed by the eNodeB:
2-2) Calculate No(ĩ), No({tilde over (j)}) using CQI(ĩ, l), CQI({tilde over (j)}, l) as in D)
2-3) Calculate V(ĩ), V({tilde over (j)}) using No(ĩ), No({tilde over (j)}) and H(ñ(ĩ)), H(ñ({tilde over (j)})) as in B) with Lagrange multiplier computed as in C).
The steps involved in the computation of the precoders at step 54 depicted in more detail in
Let (m) denote the m-th iteration of the procedure. The precoder is generated as follows:
Step 542: Initialize G(i)(m=0)=J(i), i=1 . . . , NUE. Here J(i) is RI(i)×NRX matrix with the (a, b)-th element being zero for a≠b and being 1 for a=b.
Step 544: Compute V(i)(m+1) using
Math. 6 and G(i)(m) for i=1, . . . , NUE.
Step 546: Compute G(i)(m+1) using
Math. 7 3 and V(i)(m+1) for i=1, . . . , NUE (Step 546).
Step 548: Repeat step 544 and step 546 until
Here ∥.∥F2 denotes Frobenius norm and ε is convergent threshold.
The steps involved in the computation of the Lagrange multiplier shown in
Step 602: Compute singular values of the decomposition
Step 604: Set the min and max value of Lagrange multiplier υmin, υmax
Step 606: Compute Lagrange multiplier υ=(υmax+υmin)/2.
Step 608: Compute the following quantity
Step 610: Check if {circumflex over (P)}>P then set υmin=υ (S610-1) otherwise set υmax=υ (S611-2).
Here P is total transmit power, P=E∥x∥2.
Step 612: Repeat step 606 and step 608 until |{circumflex over (P)}−P|<ε.
Here ε is convergent threshold.
Furthermore, the steps involved in the computation of noise variance shown in
Step 702: Find SINR(i, l) based on the SINR thresholds in CQI table.
Step 704: Calculate No(i) using SINR(i, l) and the total power P as
Although the exemplary embodiments of the invention have been disclosed for illustrative purposes, those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications, additions and substitutions are possible without departing from the scope of the present invention. Therefore, the present invention is not limited to the above described embodiments but is defined by the following claims.
This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from Australian Provisional Patent Application No. 2012902211, filed on May 28, 2012, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012902211 | May 2012 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2013/061691 | 4/12/2013 | WO | 00 |