Impact of Underlaid Multi-antenna D2D on Cellular Downlink in Massive MIMO Systems (1511.00781v2)
Abstract: In this paper, we consider a massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) downlink system underlaid with a network of multi-antenna D2D user equipments (UEs). Each D2D transmitter (Tx) uses all its antennas to beamform information towards its desired D2D receiver, which uses only a single antenna for reception. While beamforming at the D2D Tx reduces D2D interference to the neighbouring cellular UEs (CUEs), the cellular-to-D2D interference is also negligible due to highly directional beamforming at the massive MIMO base station. For the above proposed system, we analyze the average per-user spectral efficiency (SE) of CUEs ($R{c,d}$) as a function of the D2D area spectral efficiency (ASE). Our analysis reveals that for a fixed D2D ASE ($R_0{(d)}$) and fixed number of D2D antennas ($N$), with increasing density of D2D Txs ($\lambda$), $R{c,d}$ increases (for sufficiently large $\lambda$) and approaches a fundamental limit $R_{\infty}{c,d}$ as $\lambda \to \infty$. Also, $R_{\infty}{c,d}$ depends on $R_{0}{(d)}$ and $N$, only through the ratio $\frac{R_{0}{(d)}}{N-1}$, i.e, for a given fundamental limit $R_{\infty}{c,d}$, the D2D ASE can be approximately doubled with every doubling in $N$.