Spectral Efficiency Analysis in Dense Massive MIMO Networks (1906.00053v1)
Abstract: This work considers the uplink of a Massive MIMO network wherein the base stations (BSs) are randomly deployed according to a homogenous Poisson point process of intensity $\lambda$. Each BS is equipped with $M$ antennas and serves $K$ user equipments. A rigorous stochastic geometry framework with a multi-slope path loss model and pilot-based channel estimation is used to analyze the impact of $\lambda$ on channel estimation accuracy and spectral efficiency. Both maximum ratio and zero-forcing combiners are considered. Interesting analytical insights are provided into the interplay of network parameters such as $\lambda$, antenna-UE ratio $M/K$, and pilot reuse factor. The relative strength of pilot contamination and (inter- and intra-cell) interference is analytically and numerically evaluated, as a function of $\lambda$. It turns out that pilot contamination becomes relevant only for impractical values of $M/K\ge 100$.