English

Wireless MIMO Switching with Zero-forcing Relaying and Network-coded Relaying

Information Theory 2015-03-19 v3 Networking and Internet Architecture math.IT

Abstract

A wireless relay with multiple antennas is called a multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) switch if it maps its input links to its output links using "precode-and-forward." Namely, the MIMO switch precodes the received signal vector in the uplink using some matrix for transmission in the downlink. This paper studies the scenario of KK stations and a MIMO switch, which has full channel state information. The precoder at the MIMO switch is either a zero-forcing matrix or a network-coded matrix. With the zero-forcing precoder, each destination station receives only its desired signal with enhanced noise but no interference. With the network-coded precoder, each station receives not only its desired signal and noise, but possibly also self-interference, which can be perfectly canceled. Precoder design for optimizing the received signal-to-noise ratios at the destinations is investigated. For zero-forcing relaying, the problem is solved in closed form in the two-user case, whereas in the case of more users, efficient algorithms are proposed and shown to be close to what can be achieved by extensive random search. For network-coded relaying, we present efficient iterative algorithms that can boost the throughput further.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1108.1522,
  title  = {Wireless MIMO Switching with Zero-forcing Relaying and Network-coded Relaying},
  author = {Fanggang Wang and Soung Chang Liew and Dongning Guo},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1108.1522},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

This version is to appear in IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications later in 2012

R2 v1 2026-06-21T18:47:24.985Z