On the Reliability of Interference Alignment and Cancellation

On the Reliability of Interference Alignment and Cancellation
Author: Liangbin Li
Publisher:
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN: 9781303289057

The increasing use of wireless devices generates multi-user interference. Due to the broadcasting nature of wireless channels, multi-user interference deteriorates desirable communication. This dissertation focuses on two techniques to manage interference, interference cancellation (IC) and interference alignment (IA), which utilize the control of signal dimensions to resolve multiple streams of communication. We provide a view as how to use these two techniques for the reliability of communication, i.e., designing an IC or IA system for diversity gain. IC has been previously used with space-time block codes (STBCs) in multi-access channel (MAC) for diversity gain. Essentially, the involved IC occurs at the receiver. We first design IC and STBC at the transmitter for a broadcast channel (BC). The proposed new transmission method can obtain full receive diversity gain without knowing channel state information at the receiver (CSIR). Secondly, we study a multi-user two-hop network, where both the multi-antenna relay and destination have the capability of performing IC. We propose three protocols that explore multi-user concurrent transmission in either hop and IC at either the relay or destination. For some particular networks, enabling concurrent transmission and IC can improve the transmission rate without losing diversity gain compared to a full-TDMA protocol. For networks with more than one transmitter, IA has been extensively studied for transmission rate. We propose new IA schemes that can achieve higher diversity gain without losing rate. In the two-user X channel, we design IA with space-time block coding structure. Selection diversity is considered for the three-user interference channel.

Feedback and Interference Alignment in Networks

Feedback and Interference Alignment in Networks
Author: Changho Suh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

The increasing complexity of communication networks in size and density provides us enormous opportunities to exploit interaction among multiple nodes, thus enabling higher date rate of data streams. On the flip side, however, this complexity comes with challenges in managing interference that multiple source-destination pairs in the network may cause to each other. In this dissertation, we make progress on how we exploit the opportunities, as well as how we overcome the challenges. In the first part, we find that feedback - one of the common ways to enable interaction in networks - has a promising role in improving the capacity performance of networks. Earlier results on feedback capacity were somewhat discouraging. This is mainly due to Shannon's original result on feedback capacity where he showed that in point-to-point communication, feedback does not increase capacity. Hence, traditionally it is believed that feedback has had little impact on increasing capacity of communication links. Therefore, the use of feedback has been limited to improving the reliability of communications, usually in the form of ARQ. In this dissertation, we show that in stark contrast to the point-to-point case, feedback can improve the capacity of interference-limited network. In fact, the improvement can be unbounded. This result shows that feedback can have a potentially significant role to play in mitigating interference. Also in the process of deriving this conclusion, we characterize the feedback capacity of the two-user Gaussian interference channel to within 2 bits, one of the longstanding open problems in network information theory. In the second part, we propose a new interference management technique for widely deployed cellular networks. Inspired by a recent breakthrough, the concept of interference alignment, we develop an interference alignment technique for cellular networks. Our technique promises almost interference-free communication with the increase of the number of clients in cellular networks. It shows substantial gain (around 30% to 60%) as compared to one of the interference management techniques in current cellular systems. In addition, it comes with implementation benefits: it can actually be implemented with small changes to emerging 4G cellular standards and architectures at the base-stations and clients. In particular, the required signal-processing circuitry, software control, and channel-state feedback mechanisms are extensions of existing implementations and standards. Lastly, we extend the interference alignment principle, developed in the context of wireless networks, into other fields of network research such as storage networks. In an effort to protect information against node failures, storage networks employ coding techniques, such as maximum distance separable (MDS) erasure codes, known as optimal codes in reliability with respect to redundancy. However, these MDS codes come with prohibitive maintenance cost when it comes to repairing failed storage nodes. While only partial information stored in the failed node needs to be recovered, the conventional MDS codes focus on the complete data recovery (including unwanted data, corresponding to interference) by downloading too much information from survivor storage encoded nodes, thus causing the high repair cost. Building on the connection between wireless and wireline networks, we leverage the interference alignment principle to develop a new class of MDS codes that significantly reduces the repair cost over the conventional MDS codes and also achieves information-theoretic optimal bound on the repair cost for all admissible code parameters.

Interference Cancellation Using Space-Time Processing and Precoding Design

Interference Cancellation Using Space-Time Processing and Precoding Design
Author: Feng Li
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 103
Release: 2012-07-11
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3642307124

Interference Cancellation Using Space-Time Processing and Precoding Design introduces original design methods to achieve interference cancellation, low-complexity decoding and full diversity for a series of multi-user systems. In multi-user environments, co-channel interference will diminish the performance of wireless communications systems. In this book, we investigate how to design robust space-time codes and pre-coders to suppress the co-channel interference when multiple antennas are available. This book offers a valuable reference work for graduate students, academic researchers and engineers who are interested in interference cancellation in wireless communications. Rigorous performance analysis and various simulation illustrations are included for each design method. Dr. Feng Li is a scientific researcher at Cornell University.

Interference Management in Wireless Networks

Interference Management in Wireless Networks
Author: Venugopal V. Veeravalli
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2018-02-22
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1316730794

Learn about an information-theoretic approach to managing interference in future generation wireless networks. Focusing on cooperative schemes motivated by Coordinated Multi-Point (CoMP) technology, the book develops a robust theoretical framework for interference management that uses recent advancements in backhaul design, and practical pre-coding schemes based on local cooperation, to deliver the increased speed and reliability promised by interference alignment. Gain insight into how simple, zero-forcing pre-coding schemes are optimal in locally connected interference networks, and discover how significant rate gains can be obtained by making cell association decisions and allocating backhaul resources based on centralized (cloud) processing and knowledge of network topology. Providing a link between information-theoretic analyses and interference management schemes that are easy to implement, this is an invaluable resource for researchers, graduate students and practicing engineers in wireless communications.

Interference Alignment from Theory to Practice

Interference Alignment from Theory to Practice
Author: Omar El Ayach
Publisher:
Total Pages: 348
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

Wireless systems in which multiple users simultaneously access the propagation medium suffer from co-channel interference. Untreated interference limits the total amount of data that can be communicated reliably across the wireless links. If interfering users allocate a portion of the system's resources for information exchange and coordination, the effect of interference can be mitigated. Interference alignment (IA) is an example of a cooperative signaling strategy that alleviates the problem of co-channel interference and promises large gains in spectral efficiency. To enable alignment in practical wireless systems, channel state information (CSI) must be shared both efficiently and accurately. In this dissertation, I develop low-overhead CSI feedback strategies that help networks realize the information-theoretic performance of IA and facilitate its adoption in practical systems. The developed strategies leverage the concepts of analog, digital, and differential feedback to provide IA networks with significantly more accurate and affordable CSI when compared to existing solutions. In my first contribution, I develop an analog feedback strategy to enable IA in multiple antenna systems; multiple antennas are one of IA's key enabling technologies and perhaps the most promising IA use case. In my second contribution, I leverage temporal correlation to improve CSI quantization in limited feedback single-antenna systems. The Grassmannian differential strategy developed provides several orders of magnitude in CSI compression and ensures almost-perfect IA performance in various fading scenarios. In my final contribution, I complete my practical treatment of IA by revisiting its performance when CSI acquisition overhead is explicitly accounted for. This last contribution settles the viability of IA, from a CSI acquisition perspective, and demonstrates the utility of the proposed feedback strategies in transitioning interference alignment from theory to practice.