ITGTLGNISPOct 5, 2023

Mitigating Pilot Contamination and Enabling IoT Scalability in Massive MIMO Systems

arXiv:2310.03278v16 citationsh-index: 6
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses scalability challenges for IoT deployment in 5G networks, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods.

This paper tackles pilot contamination and scalability issues in massive MIMO systems for 5G networks by proposing a pilot allocation scheme that assigns orthogonal sequences to clusters of IoT devices instead of individual devices, enabling accommodation of 200 devices with only a 12.5% omission rate using ten pilot sequences.

Massive MIMO is expected to play an important role in the development of 5G networks. This paper addresses the issue of pilot contamination and scalability in massive MIMO systems. The current practice of reusing orthogonal pilot sequences in adjacent cells leads to difficulty in differentiating incoming inter- and intra-cell pilot sequences. One possible solution is to increase the number of orthogonal pilot sequences, which results in dedicating more space of coherence block to pilot transmission than data transmission. This, in turn, also hinders the scalability of massive MIMO systems, particularly in accommodating a large number of IoT devices within a cell. To overcome these challenges, this paper devises an innovative pilot allocation scheme based on the data transfer patterns of IoT devices. The scheme assigns orthogonal pilot sequences to clusters of devices instead of individual devices, allowing multiple devices to utilize the same pilot for periodically transmitting data. Moreover, we formulate the pilot assignment problem as a graph coloring problem and use the max k-cut graph partitioning approach to overcome the pilot contamination in a multicell massive MIMO system. The proposed scheme significantly improves the spectral efficiency and enables the scalability of massive MIMO systems; for instance, by using ten orthogonal pilot sequences, we are able to accommodate 200 devices with only a 12.5% omission rate.

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