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Information-theoretic analysis of MIMO channel sounding
Authors
Daniel S. Baum and Helmut BölcskeiReference
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Vol. 57, No. 11, pp. 7555-7577, Nov. 2011
DOI: 10.1109/TIT.2011.2165129
[BibTeX, LaTeX, and HTML Reference] Abstract
The large majority of commercially available
multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) radio channel measurement
devices (sounders) is based on time-division multiplexed
switching (TDMS) of a single transmit/receive radio frequency
chain into the elements of a transmit/receive antenna array.
While being cost-effective, such a solution can cause significant
measurement errors due to phase noise and frequency offset
in the local oscillators. In this paper, we systematically analyze
the resulting errors and show that, in practice, overestimation
of channel capacity by several hundred percent can occur. Overestimation
is caused by phase noise (and to a lesser extent by
frequency offset) leading to an increase of the MIMO channel
rank. Our analysis furthermore reveals that the impact of phase
errors is, in general, most pronounced if the physical channel has
low rank (typical for line-of-sight or poor scattering scenarios).
The extreme case of a rank-1 physical channel is analyzed in
detail. The capacity bounds derived in this paper show excellent
agreement with measurement results. In light of the findings
of this paper, the results obtained through MIMO channel
measurement campaigns using TDMS-based channel sounders
should be interpreted with great care.Keywords
Channel measurement, multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO), phase noise, sounding Download this document:
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