Scheduling of multi-antenna broadcast systems with heterogeneous users

We study the problem of efficiently scheduling users in a Gaussian broadcast channel with M transmit antennas and K independent receivers, each with a single antenna. We first focus on a scenario with two transmit antennas and statistically identical users, and analyze the gap between the full sum c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Borst, Sem, Whiting, Phil, Modiano, Eytan H, Jagannathan, Krishna Prasanna
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/108101
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8238-8130
Description
Summary:We study the problem of efficiently scheduling users in a Gaussian broadcast channel with M transmit antennas and K independent receivers, each with a single antenna. We first focus on a scenario with two transmit antennas and statistically identical users, and analyze the gap between the full sum capacity and the rate that can be achieved by transmitting to a suitably selected pair of users. In particular, we consider a scheme that picks the user with the largest channel gain, and selects a second user from the next L - 1 strongest ones to form the best pair, taking channel orientations into account as well. We prove that the expected rate gap converges to 1/(L- 1) nats/symbol when the total number of users K tends to infinity. Allowing L to increase with K, it may be deduced that transmitting to a properly chosen pair of users is asymptotically optimal, while considerably reducing the feedback overhead and scheduling complexity. Next, we tackle the problem of maximizing a weighted sum rate in a scenario with heterogeneous user characteristics. We establish a novel upper bound for the weighted sum capacity, which we then use to show that the maximum expected weighted sum rate can be asymptotically achieved by transmitting to a suitably selected subset of at most MC users, where C denotes the number of distinct user classes. Numerical experiments indicate that the asymptotic results are remarkably accurate and that the proposed schemes operate close to absolute performance bounds, even for a moderate number of users.