The amalgamation of cell-free networks and reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS) has become a prospective technique for future sixth-generation wireless communication systems. In this paper, we focus on the precoding and beamforming design for a downlink RIS-aided cell-free network. The design is formulated as a non-convex optimization problem by jointly optimizing the combining vector, active precoding, and passive RIS beamforming for minimizing the weighted sum of users' mean square error. A novel joint distributed precoding and beamforming framework is proposed to decentralize the alternating optimization method for acquiring a suboptimal solution to the design problem. Finally, numerical results validate the effectiveness of the proposed distributed precoding and beamforming framework, showing its low-complexity and improved scalability compared with the centralized method.
Next-generation wireless networks are expected to utilize the limited radio frequency (RF) resources more efficiently with the aid of intelligent transceivers. To this end, we propose a promising transceiver architecture relying on stacked intelligent metasurfaces (SIM). An SIM is constructed by stacking an array of programmable metasurface layers, where each layer consists of a massive number of low-cost passive meta-atoms that individually manipulate the electromagnetic (EM) waves. By appropriately configuring the passive meta-atoms, an SIM is capable of accomplishing advanced computation and signal processing tasks, such as multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) precoding/combining, multi-user interference mitigation, and radar sensing, as the EM wave propagates through the multiple layers of the metasurface, which effectively reduces both the RF-related energy consumption and processing delay. Inspired by this, we provide an overview of the SIM-aided MIMO transceiver design, which encompasses its hardware architecture and its potential benefits over state-of-the-art solutions. Furthermore, we discuss promising application scenarios and identify the open research challenges associated with the design of advanced SIM architectures for next-generation wireless networks. Finally, numerical results are provided for quantifying the benefits of wave-based signal processing in wireless systems.
The advent of the sixth-generation (6G) of wireless communications has given rise to the necessity to connect vast quantities of heterogeneous wireless devices, which requires advanced system capabilities far beyond existing network architectures. In particular, such massive communication has been recognized as a prime driver that can empower the 6G vision of future ubiquitous connectivity, supporting Internet of Human-Machine-Things for which massive access is critical. This paper surveys the most recent advances toward massive access in both academic and industry communities, focusing primarily on the promising compressive sensing-based grant-free massive access paradigm. We first specify the limitations of existing random access schemes and reveal that the practical implementation of massive communication relies on a dramatically different random access paradigm from the current ones mainly designed for human-centric communications. Then, a compressive sensing-based grant-free massive access roadmap is presented, where the evolutions from single-antenna to large-scale antenna array-based base stations, from single-station to cooperative massive multiple-input multiple-output systems, and from unsourced to sourced random access scenarios are detailed. Finally, we discuss the key challenges and open issues to shed light on the potential future research directions of grant-free massive access.
This paper investigates the sensing performance of two intelligent reflecting surface (IRS)-enabled non-line-of-sight (NLoS) sensing systems with fully-passive and semi-passive IRSs, respectively. In particular, we consider a fundamental setup with one base station (BS), one uniform linear array (ULA) IRS, and one point target in the NLoS region of the BS. Accordingly, we analyze the sensing signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) performance for a target detection scenario and the estimation Cram\'er-Rao bound (CRB) performance for a target's direction-of-arrival (DoA) estimation scenario, in cases where the transmit beamforming at the BS and the reflective beamforming at the IRS are jointly optimized. First, for the target detection scenario, we characterize the maximum sensing SNR when the BS-IRS channels are line-of-sight (LoS) and Rayleigh fading, respectively. It is revealed that when the number of reflecting elements $N$ equipped at the IRS becomes sufficiently large, the maximum sensing SNR increases proportionally to $N^2$ for the semi-passive-IRS sensing system, but proportionally to $N^4$ for the fully-passive-IRS counterpart. Then, for the target's DoA estimation scenario, we analyze the minimum CRB performance when the BS-IRS channel follows Rayleigh fading. Specifically, when $N$ grows, the minimum CRB decreases inversely proportionally to $N^4$ and $N^6$ for the semi-passive and fully-passive-IRS sensing systems, respectively. Finally, numerical results are presented to corroborate our analysis across various transmit and reflective beamforming design schemes under general channel setups. It is shown that the fully-passive-IRS sensing system outperforms the semi-passive counterpart when $N$ exceeds a certain threshold. This advantage is attributed to the additional reflective beamforming gain in the IRS-BS path, which efficiently compensates for the path loss for a large $N$.
This correspondence presents a novel sensing-assisted sparse channel recovery approach for massive antenna wireless communication systems. We focus on a fundamental configuration with one massive-antenna base station (BS) and one single-antenna communication user (CU). The wireless channel exhibits sparsity and consists of multiple paths associated with scatterers detectable via radar sensing. Under this setup, the BS first sends downlink pilots to the CU and concurrently receives the echo pilot signals for sensing the surrounding scatterers. Subsequently, the CU sends feedback information on its received pilot signal to the BS. Accordingly, the BS determines the sparse basis based on the sensed scatterers and proceeds to recover the wireless channel, exploiting the feedback information based on advanced compressive sensing (CS) algorithms. Numerical results show that the proposed sensing-assisted approach significantly increases the overall achievable rate than the conventional design relying on a discrete Fourier transform (DFT)-based sparse basis without sensing, thanks to the reduced training overhead and enhanced recovery accuracy with limited feedback.
Future sixth-generation (6G) systems are expected to leverage extremely large-scale multiple-input multiple-output (XL-MIMO) technology, which significantly expands the range of the near-field region. While accurate channel estimation is essential for beamforming and data detection, the unique characteristics of near-field channels pose additional challenges to the effective acquisition of channel state information. In this paper, we propose a novel codebook design, which allows efficient near-field channel estimation with significantly reduced codebook size. Specifically, we consider the eigen-problem based on the near-field electromagnetic wave transmission model. Moreover, we derive the general form of the eigenvectors associated with the near-field channel matrix, revealing their noteworthy connection to the discrete prolate spheroidal sequence (DPSS). Based on the proposed near-field codebook design, we further introduce a two-step channel estimation scheme. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed codebook design not only achieves superior sparsification performance of near-field channels with a lower leakage effect, but also significantly improves the accuracy in compressive sensing channel estimation.
For integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) systems, the channel information essential for communication and sensing tasks fluctuates across different timescales. Specifically, wireless sensing primarily focuses on acquiring path state information (PSI) (e.g., delay, angle, and Doppler) of individual multi-path components to sense the environment, which usually evolves much more slowly than the composite channel state information (CSI) required for communications. Typically, the CSI is approximately unchanged during the channel coherence time, which characterizes the statistical properties of wireless communication channels. However, this concept is less appropriate for describing that for wireless sensing. To this end, in this paper, we introduce a new timescale to study the variation of the PSI from a channel geometric perspective, termed path invariant time, during which the PSI largely remains constant. Our analysis indicates that the path invariant time considerably exceeds the channel coherence time. Thus, capitalizing on these dual timescales of the wireless channel, in this paper, we propose a novel ISAC framework exploiting the recently proposed delay-Doppler alignment modulation (DDAM) technique. Different from most existing studies on DDAM that assume the availability of perfect PSI, in this work, we propose a novel algorithm, termed as adaptive simultaneously orthogonal matching pursuit with support refinement (ASOMP-SR), for joint environment sensing and PSI estimation. We also analyze the performance of DDAM with imperfectly sensed PSI.Simulation results unveil that the proposed DDAM-based ISAC can achieve superior spectral efficiency and a reduced peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) compared to standard orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM).
Computation offloading has become a popular solution to support computationally intensive and latency-sensitive applications by transferring computing tasks to mobile edge servers (MESs) for execution, which is known as mobile/multi-access edge computing (MEC). To improve the MEC performance, it is required to design an optimal offloading strategy that includes offloading decision (i.e., whether offloading or not) and computational resource allocation of MEC. The design can be formulated as a mixed-integer nonlinear programming (MINLP) problem, which is generally NP-hard and its effective solution can be obtained by performing online inference through a well-trained deep neural network (DNN) model. However, when the system environments change dynamically, the DNN model may lose efficacy due to the drift of input parameters, thereby decreasing the generalization ability of the DNN model. To address this unique challenge, in this paper, we propose a multi-head ensemble multi-task learning (MEMTL) approach with a shared backbone and multiple prediction heads (PHs). Specifically, the shared backbone will be invariant during the PHs training and the inferred results will be ensembled, thereby significantly reducing the required training overhead and improving the inference performance. As a result, the joint optimization problem for offloading decision and resource allocation can be efficiently solved even in a time-varying wireless environment. Experimental results show that the proposed MEMTL outperforms benchmark methods in both the inference accuracy and mean square error without requiring additional training data.
Extremely large-scale multiple-input multiple-output (XL-MIMO) is a promising technique to enable versatile applications for future wireless communications.To realize the huge potential performance gain, accurate channel state information is a fundamental technical prerequisite. In conventional massive MIMO, the channel is often modeled by the far-field planar-wavefront with rich sparsity in the angular domain that facilitates the design of low-complexity channel estimation. However, this sparsity is not conspicuous in XL-MIMO systems due to the non-negligible near-field spherical-wavefront. To address the inherent performance loss of the angular-domain channel estimation schemes, we first propose the polar-domain multiple residual dense network (P-MRDN) for XL-MIMO systems based on the polar-domain sparsity of the near-field channel by improving the existing MRDN scheme. Furthermore, a polar-domain multi-scale residual dense network (P-MSRDN) is designed to improve the channel estimation accuracy. Finally, simulation results reveal the superior performance of the proposed schemes compared with existing benchmark schemes and the minimal influence of the channel sparsity on the proposed schemes.