ITLGSPDec 15, 2020

Machine Learning for MU-MIMO Receive Processing in OFDM Systems

arXiv:2012.08177v228 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of enhancing MU-MIMO receiver performance for wireless communication systems, offering an incremental improvement over existing LMMSE methods.

This paper proposes an ML-enhanced MU-MIMO receiver that improves upon the conventional LMMSE architecture. It uses CNNs to approximate channel estimation error statistics and a CNN-based demapper to jointly process OFDM symbols and subcarriers, leading to improved accuracy, particularly in high mobility scenarios.

Machine learning (ML) starts to be widely used to enhance the performance of multi-user multiple-input multiple-output (MU-MIMO) receivers. However, it is still unclear if such methods are truly competitive with respect to conventional methods in realistic scenarios and under practical constraints. In addition to enabling accurate signal reconstruction on realistic channel models, MU-MIMO receive algorithms must allow for easy adaptation to a varying number of users without the need for retraining. In contrast to existing work, we propose an ML-enhanced MU-MIMO receiver that builds on top of a conventional linear minimum mean squared error (LMMSE) architecture. It preserves the interpretability and scalability of the LMMSE receiver, while improving its accuracy in two ways. First, convolutional neural networks (CNNs) are used to compute an approximation of the second-order statistics of the channel estimation error which are required for accurate equalization. Second, a CNN-based demapper jointly processes a large number of orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) symbols and subcarriers, which allows it to compute better log likelihood ratios (LLRs) by compensating for channel aging. The resulting architecture can be used in the up- and downlink and is trained in an end-to-end manner, removing the need for hard-to-get perfect channel state information (CSI) during the training phase. Simulation results demonstrate consistent performance improvements over the baseline which are especially pronounced in high mobility scenarios.

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