Adaptive precoding in a MIMO wireless communication system
09847819 · 2017-12-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04W72/21
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/14
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/0048
ELECTRICITY
H04B7/0626
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04L5/14
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
This invention presents methods for estimating MU-MIMO channel information using SU-MIMO channel information to choose a modulation and channel coding appropriate for the quality of the MU-MIMO channels, for adaptively selecting MU-MIMO precoding methods based on estimations of a plural of UEs and for compensating hardware impairments in MU-MIMO precoding.
Claims
1. A method for compensating hardware impairments and circuit conditions in precoding comprising storing Hardware Impairment Parameters (HIPs) of a User Equipment (UE) that describe imperfections and/or nonlinearities in the UE hardware in a database that a Base Station (BS) can access to, wherein the UE has a Unique Device Identity (UDID) and said UE HIPs are associated with the UDID; the BS acquiring the UDID of the UE; the BS obtaining the stored HIPs of the UE from the database using the UDID; and the BS using the obtained HIPs in the precoding to compensate hardware impairments and circuit conditions in the UE.
2. The method in claim 1 further comprising the BS obtaining HIPS of multiple UEs and using the obtained HIPs in a MU-MIMO precoding to compensate hardware impairments and circuit conditions in said multiple UEs.
3. The method in claim 1, wherein the Hardware Impairment Parameters (HIPs) corresponding to different operating temperatures are stored in the database, further comprising the BS requesting the UE to send the UE's real-time operating temperature to the BS, the BS obtaining the HIPs corresponding to the received UE's operating temperature, and the BS using HIPs corresponding to the received UE's operating temperature in the precoding compensation.
4. The method in claim 1 further comprising the BS requesting a UE to feed back the UE's HIPs to the BS if the BS cannot obtain the HIPs of the UE using the UE's UDID; and after receiving this request, the UE sending the UE's HIPs to the BS.
5. The method in claim 4 further comprising the BS sending the UE's HIPs to said database for storage.
6. The method in claim 1 further comprising when a handover is needed as the UE moves from a first BS to a second BS, the first BS sending the HIPs of said UE to the second BS through a network.
7. The method in claim 1 further comprising sharing said database in a network of multiple carriers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(4) Reference may now be made to the drawings wherein like numerals refer to like parts throughout. Exemplary embodiments of the invention may now be described. The exemplary embodiments are provided to illustrate aspects of the invention and should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention. When the exemplary embodiments are described with reference to block diagrams or flowcharts, each block represents a method step or an apparatus element for performing the method step. Depending upon the implementation, the corresponding apparatus element may be configured in hardware, software, firmware or combinations thereof.
(5) In the considered wireless communication system, the BS has N transmitting antennas in the downlink, while without loss of generality each UE has one receiving antenna. It is straightforward to generalize to UEs with more than one receiving antenna.
(6) Without loss of generality, we assume that the BS has selected UEs to be included in a MU-MIMO group, which means that the indices of the K UEs that may be scheduled on the same resource allocation are determined. Then, the BS begins the process of the estimation of MU-MIMO CQI from SU-MIMO CQI 1 which is presented in
(7) One embodiment is a method for estimating MU-MIMO CQI values 3 comprising a BS obtaining SU-MIMO CQI values of a plural of UEs 2, which can be either by UEs transmitting test or pilot signals to the BS in case of reciprocal channels or BS transmitting test or pilot signals to the UEs and UEs feeding back their CQI values to the BS in case of non-reciprocal channels. Then, the BS estimates the MU-MIMO CQI values for the plural of UEs using the SU-MIMO CQI values. Formulas that can provide MU-MIMO CQI values for a plural of UEs using the SU-MIMO CQI values are listed below.
(8) The MU-MIMO CQI estimation formula depends on the selected precoding method, which includes at least CB and/or ZF. For example, the formula for CB is
(9)
and the formula for ZF is
(10)
where 1/γ.sub.k is the reciprocal of the CQI of the kth UE, u.sub.k is the normalized channel coefficient vector of the kth user (If u.sub.k is not a unit norm, replace it with
(11)
the mutual interference channel of the kth UE is {tilde over (H)}.sub.k=[u.sub.i.sup.T . . . u.sub.k−1.sup.T u.sub.k+1.sup.T . . . u.sub.K.sup.T].sup.T, and a.sub.k is the CSI error of the kth UE. The method to acquire a.sub.k by the BS is provided by this invention.
(12) Furthermore, once estimates of the MU-MIMO CQI values are obtained, the BS chooses a modulation and channel coding appropriate for the quality of the MU-MIMO channels 4. The BS may also choose a precoding that increases the sum rate of the plural of UEs.
(13) Another embodiment is a method for adaptive precoding using the above MU-MIMO CQI estimation, which is presented in
(14) When the BS estimates the throughput of each of the K UEs 10, one method is to calculate
(15)
and choose the maximum of these K values as C.sup.SU.
(16) The BS may estimate the sum rate of the MU-MIMO user group based on a first precoding 11, e.g., CB. Methods of this calculation are listed below.
(17) CB-1: the BS estimates the sum rate of CB as
(18)
(19) CB-2: the BS acquires the normalized channel coefficient vector of the kth user as u.sub.k. If u.sub.k is not a unit norm, replace it with
(20)
Then, the BS estimates the sum rate of
(21)
(22) The BS may estimate the sum rate of the MU-MIMO user group based on a second precoding 12, e.g., ZF. Methods of this calculation are listed below.
(23) ZF-1: the BS estimates the sum rate of the ZF precoding method according to
(24)
(25) ZF-2: the BS acquires the normalized channel coefficient vector of the kth user as u.sub.k. If u.sub.k is not a unit norm, replace it with
(26)
Then, the BS estimates the sum rate of ZF as
(27)
(28) Furthermore, the BS may divide the K UEs into two sets. The first set Ω.sub.1 includes K.sub.1 UEs with a first precoding, e.g., CB, while the second set Ω.sub.2 includes the remaining K.sub.2=K−K.sub.1 UEs with a second precoding. One possible method to divide the UEs is based on the SU-MIMO CQI, e.g., the UEs with SU-MIMO CQI values lower than a predefined threshold value belong to Ω.sub.1 and the rest of the UEs belong to Ω.sub.2. Suppose that the UE indices of Ω.sub.1 are {i.sub.1, . . . , i.sub.K.sub.
(29) The BS estimates the sum rate of the UEs in set Ω.sub.1 as
(30)
(31) The BS estimates the sum rate of the UEs in set Ω.sub.2 as
(32)
(33) The BS estimates the sum rate of the K UEs based on the hybrid precoding 13 as C.sup.Hybrid=C.sup.CB,Ω.sup.
(34) Once the adaptive precoding is completed on each resource block for the current time instant 15, each resource block may have a different precoding method in the next time instant.
(35) In the formulas presented above, it is assumed that the BS acquires the CSI errors of the K users. Three methods are presented below for the BS to acquire the CSI errors.
(36) In the first method referred to as FDD-1 for a FDD system where the CSI is fed back by UEs, each UE calculates its correlation coefficient and feeds it back to the BS through the uplink control channel. At the UE side, it estimates the channel vector ĥ.sub.k (represented as a column vector) between the BS and itself. Then, it quantizes ĥ.sub.k as v.sub.k (also a column vector) in a codebook set which is stored in the UE's memory. The correlation coefficient could be calculated as
(37)
where ∥x∥.sub.2 denotes the 2-norm defined as
(38)
Then, a.sub.k is quantized and fed back to the BS through uplink control channel or shared data transmission channel.
(39) In the second method referred to as FDD-2 for an FDD system where the CSI is fed back by UEs, the CSI errors of all UEs are estimated as the same value as
(40)
where d is the average distance between any two vectors in the codebook set. If the codebook includes M vectors, then M could be calculated as
(41)
where v.sub.i and v.sub.j are two different vectors in a codebook set. An alternative estimation is
(42)
where 0<β<1 is a scaling factor which may be determined by the BS itself, and d.sub.max is the maximum distance between any two vectors in the codebook set.
(43) The third method referred to as TDD-1 is for a TDD system where the downlink CSI is acquired by the BS employing the channel reciprocity of the uplink transmission. Let the uplink channel quality of the kth user be SNR.sub.k.sup.UL, then one possible way to estimate the channel coefficient is
(44)
where the parameter g is a function of the number of the transmitting antennas of BS, e.g., g=N.
(45) Furthermore, a.sub.k may be modified by the BS according to the Hardware Impairment Parameters (HIP) and the Current Temperatures (CT) of the UE to compensate for the effects caused by impairments of the UE's hardware.
(46) Hardware impairment is a limiting factor in MU-MIMO. In one embodiment, the BS uses information about the circuits in the BS and/or the UEs, such as the information included in the HIP of a UE and the CT at which the UE is operating, to modify the precoding to compensate for the effects caused by imperfections and nonlinearities in the hardware. The HIP of an UE may include parameters that capture the imperfections and nonlinearities in the hardware of the UE. The HIP may also include these parameters under different operating temperatures. The HIP of a UE may be characterized at factory or before being sold or given to a user. This can be done using an automated test equipment, which may include a temperature chamber that tests the UE under different temperatures in the operating temperature range to obtain its HIP. The HIP, including its variations under different temperatures, may be stored in a database, or the UE or both. The process of a BS obtaining the HIP and CT of a UE is presented in
(47) Although the foregoing descriptions of the preferred embodiments of the present inventions have shown, described, or illustrated the fundamental novel features or principles of the inventions, it is understood that various omissions, substitutions, and changes in the form of the detail of the methods, elements or apparatuses as illustrated, as well as the uses thereof, may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the present inventions. Hence, the scope of the present inventions should not be limited to the foregoing descriptions. Rather, the principles of the inventions may be applied to a wide range of methods, systems, and apparatuses, to achieve the advantages described herein and to achieve other advantages or to satisfy other objectives as well.