SPARMay 9

Low-Complexity Beamspace Channel Denoiser for mmWave Massive MIMO with Low-Resolution ADCs

arXiv:2605.0885538.91 citations
AI Analysis

It addresses the need for efficient channel estimation in mmWave massive MIMO systems with low-resolution ADCs, which is critical for practical deployment.

The paper proposes a low-complexity beamspace channel denoising algorithm for mmWave massive MIMO with low-resolution ADCs, achieving near-linear computational complexity and comparable performance to computationally intensive methods.

In this paper, we propose a low-complexity beamspace channel denoising algorithm for millimeter-wave (mmWave) massive multi-input multi-output (MIMO) systems with low-resolution analog-to-digital converters (ADCs). The proposed method exploits the inherent sparsity of mmWave channels in the beamspace domain and formulates the denoising problem as a Bayesian binary hypothesis testing under a Bernoulli-complex Gaussian prior. To capture the distortion induced by low-resolution ADCs in a complexity-efficient manner, thermal noise and quantization noise are jointly modeled as a composite noise. Based on this modeling, a closed-form threshold value and a hard-thresholding-based denoising rule are derived to distinguish signal-dominant and noise-dominant components. The resulting algorithm avoids computationally intensive operations such as matrix inversion, iterative optimization, and parameter searching, and achieves near-linear computational complexity with respect to the number of antennas. Furthermore, a hardware-efficient very large-scale integration (VLSI) architecture is developed to enable practical deployment of the proposed algorithm, and is implemented on an AMD-Xilinx Kintex UltraScale+ KCU116 FPGA platform. The design incorporates hardware-aware simplifications and an efficient processing structure, leading to significantly lower latency and reduced hardware resource utilization compared to existing hardware implementations, along with sublinear scaling as the number of antennas increases. Extensive simulation results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves performance comparable to computationally intensive existing approaches while significantly reducing computational complexity.

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