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e-Article

Practical Hybrid Beamforming for Millimeter Wave Massive MIMO Full Duplex With Limited Dynamic Range
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Open Journal of the Communications Society IEEE Open J. Commun. Soc. Communications Society, IEEE Open Journal of the. 3:127-143 2022
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Radio frequency
Array signal processing
Noise level
Transceivers
Hardware
Dynamic range
Uplink
Millimeter wave
full duplex
hybrid beamforming
limited dynamic range
minorization-maximization
Language
ISSN
2644-125X
Abstract
Full Duplex (FD) radio has emerged as a promising solution to increase the data rates by up to a factor of two via simultaneous transmission and reception in the same frequency band. This paper studies a novel hybrid beamforming (HYBF) design to maximize the weighted sum-rate (WSR) in a single-cell millimeter wave (mmWave) massive multiple-input-multiple-output (mMIMO) FD system. Motivated by practical considerations, we assume that the multi-antenna users and hybrid FD base station (BS) suffer from the limited dynamic range (LDR) noise due to non-ideal hardware and an impairment aware HYBF approach is adopted by integrating the traditional LDR noise model in the mmWave band. In contrast to the conventional HYBF schemes, our design also considers the joint sum-power and the practical per-antenna power constraints. A novel interference, self-interference (SI) and LDR noise aware optimal power allocation scheme for the uplink (UL) users and FD BS is also presented to satisfy the joint constraints. The maximum achievable gain of a multi-user (MU) mmWave FD system over a fully digital half duplex (HD) system with different LDR noise levels and numbers of the radio-frequency (RF) chains is investigated. Simulation results show that our design outperforms the HD system with only a few RF chains at any LDR noise level. The advantage of having amplitude control at the analog stage is also examined, and additional gain for the mmWave FD system becomes evident when the number of RF chains at the hybrid FD BS is small.