Crystallization in Large Wireless Networks
We analyze fading interference relay networks where single-antenna source-destination terminal pairs communicate concurrently and in the same frequency band through a set of single-antenna relays using half-duplex two-hop relaying. Assuming that the relays have channel state information (CSI), it is...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE transactions on information theory 2007-10, Vol.53 (10), p.3319-3349 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We analyze fading interference relay networks where single-antenna source-destination terminal pairs communicate concurrently and in the same frequency band through a set of single-antenna relays using half-duplex two-hop relaying. Assuming that the relays have channel state information (CSI), it is shown that in the large-M limit, provided grows fast enough as a function of the network "decouples" in the sense that the individual source-destination terminal pair capacities are strictly positive. The corresponding required rate of growth of as a function of is found to be sufficient to also make the individual source-destination fading links converge to nonfading links. We say that the network "crystallizes" as it breaks up into a set of effectively isolated "wires in the air." A large-deviations analysis is performed to characterize the "crystallization" rate, i.e., the rate (as a function of M, K) at which the decoupled links converge to nonfading links. In the course of this analysis, we develop a new technique for characterizing the large-deviations behavior of certain sums of dependent random variables. For the case of no CSI at the relay level, assuming amplify-and-forward relaying, we compute the per source- destination terminal pair capacity for M, Krarrinfin, with K/Mrarrbeta fixed, using tools from large random matrix theory. |
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ISSN: | 0018-9448 1557-9654 |
DOI: | 10.1109/TIT.2007.904789 |