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Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 9(28), p. 1455-1468, 2010

DOI: 10.1109/jsac.2010.101207

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Adaptive Spatial Intercell Interference Cancellation in Multicell Wireless Networks

Journal article published in 2009 by Jun Zhang ORCID, Jeffrey G. Andrews
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Downlink spatial intercell interference cancellation (ICIC) is considered for mitigating other-cell interference using multiple transmit antennas. A principle question we explore is whether it is better to do ICIC or simply standard single-cell beamforming. We explore this question analytically and show that beamforming is preferred for all users when the edge SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) is low ($<0$ dB), and ICIC is preferred when the edge SNR is high ($>10$ dB), for example in an urban setting. At medium SNR, a proposed adaptive strategy, where multiple base stations jointly select transmission strategies based on the user location, outperforms both while requiring a lower feedback rate than the pure ICIC approach. The employed metric is sum rate, which is normally a dubious metric for cellular systems, but surprisingly we show that even with this reward function the adaptive strategy also improves fairness. When the channel information is provided by limited feedback, the impact of the induced quantization error is also investigated. It is shown that ICIC with well-designed feedback strategies still provides significant throughput gain. Comment: 26 pages, submitted to IEEE J. Select. Areas Commun. special issue on Cooperative Communications in MIMO Cellular Networks, Sept. 2009