4.6 Article

Channel Hardening: A Comparison Between Concentrated and Distributed Massive MIMO

Journal

IEEE ANTENNAS AND WIRELESS PROPAGATION LETTERS
Volume 22, Issue 6, Pages 1326-1330

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LAWP.2023.3241481

Keywords

5G mobile systems; channel characterization; channel hardening; distributed multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO); massive MIMO (mMIMO)

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In this letter, a comparative analysis is presented on the hardening effect of concentrated and distributed massive multiple-input-multiple-output channels (C-mMIMO and D-mMIMO, respectively). The analysis is conducted in two buildings with similar structural characteristics, considering the frequency bands of 3.5 and 26 GHz for 5G deployments. Experimental data at 3.5 GHz and simulation results at 26 GHz using a rigorous ray tracing method are used. Both measurements and simulations show that indoor environments provide a sufficiently high level of hardening for mMIMO systems, contributing to the reliability of communication systems or sensor networks.
In this letter, a comparative analysis of the hardening effect for concentrated and distributed massive multiple-input-multiple-output channels (C-mMIMO and D-mMIMO, respectively) is presented. The analysis is carried out in two buildings with similar structural characteristics, considering two frequency bands of interest for 5G deployments, 3.5 and 26 GHz; taking into account both experimental data at 3.5 GHz and simulation results obtained in the 26 GHz band using a rigorous and well-tested ray tracing method. Both, measurements and simulations emulated C-mMIMO and D-mMIMO systems in an indoor cell in the framework of a time division duplex (TDD)-orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (TDD-OFDM) system. To quantify the level of hardening that the specific channels under analysis offer in the frequency domain, the standard deviation of the gain of the channels is used, as well as its evolution as the number of active antennas at the base station grows. The results obtained for both mMIMO systems show that a sufficiently high level of hardening occurs in indoor environments to contribute to the reliability of communication systems or sensor networks.

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