TY - GEN
T1 - On the spectral efficiency of links with multi-antenna receivers in non-homogenous wireless networks
AU - Govindasamy, Siddhartan
AU - Bliss, Daniel
PY - 2011/9/2
Y1 - 2011/9/2
N2 - An asymptotic technique is developed to find the Signal-to-Interference- plus-Noise-Ratio (SINR) and spectral efficiency of a link with N receiver antennas in wireless networks with non-homogeneous distributions of nodes. It is found that with appropriate normalization, the SINR and spectral efficiency converge with probability 1 to asymptotic limits as N increases. This technique is applied to networks with power-law node intensities, which includes homogeneous networks as a special case, to find a simple approximation for the spectral efficiency. It is found that for receivers in dense clusters, the SINR grows with N at rates higher than that of homogeneous networks and that constant spectral efficiencies can be maintained if the ratio of N to node density is constant. This result also enables the analysis of a new scaling regime where the distribution of nodes in the network flattens rather than increases uniformly. It is found that in many cases in this regime, N needs to grow approximately exponentially to maintain a constant spectral efficiency. In addition to strengthening previously known results for homogeneous networks, these results provide insight into the benefit of using antenna arrays in non-homogeneous wireless networks, for which few results are available in the literature.
AB - An asymptotic technique is developed to find the Signal-to-Interference- plus-Noise-Ratio (SINR) and spectral efficiency of a link with N receiver antennas in wireless networks with non-homogeneous distributions of nodes. It is found that with appropriate normalization, the SINR and spectral efficiency converge with probability 1 to asymptotic limits as N increases. This technique is applied to networks with power-law node intensities, which includes homogeneous networks as a special case, to find a simple approximation for the spectral efficiency. It is found that for receivers in dense clusters, the SINR grows with N at rates higher than that of homogeneous networks and that constant spectral efficiencies can be maintained if the ratio of N to node density is constant. This result also enables the analysis of a new scaling regime where the distribution of nodes in the network flattens rather than increases uniformly. It is found that in many cases in this regime, N needs to grow approximately exponentially to maintain a constant spectral efficiency. In addition to strengthening previously known results for homogeneous networks, these results provide insight into the benefit of using antenna arrays in non-homogeneous wireless networks, for which few results are available in the literature.
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U2 - 10.1109/icc.2011.5963374
DO - 10.1109/icc.2011.5963374
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:80052178721
SN - 9781612842332
T3 - IEEE International Conference on Communications
BT - 2011 IEEE International Conference on Communications, ICC 2011
T2 - 2011 IEEE International Conference on Communications, ICC 2011
Y2 - 5 June 2011 through 9 June 2011
ER -