Multiple-Input and Multiple-Output, MIMO: (Mee-Moh or My-Moh)

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Multiple-Input and Multiple-Output, MIMO

(mee-moh or my-moh)

Understanding of SISO, SIMO, MISO and MIMO

Topics
Introduction What is MIMO? History of MIMO Functions of MIMO Forms of MIMO Applications of MIMO Mathematical Description

Introduction
In radio, multiple-input and multipleoutput, or MIMO is the use of multiple antennas at both the transmitter and receiver to improve communication performance. It is one of several forms of smart antenna (SA), and the state of the art of SA technology.

Introduction
MIMO technology has attracted attention in wireless communications, since it offers significant increases in data throughput and link range without additional bandwidth or transmit power. It achieves this by higher spectral efficiency (more bits per second per Hertz of bandwidth) and link reliability or diversity (reduced fading).

Introduction
MIMO is a current theme of international wireless research. The major limitation encountered when developing wireless technologies is that as capacity increases so too must the spectrum and/or transmitting power. To combat this problem, the use of multiple antennas at both ends has been proposed popularly known as a multiple-inputmultiple-output (MIMO).

What is MIMO?
A technique for boosting wireless bandwidth and range by taking advantage of multiplexing.

What is MIMO?
MIMO wireless uses different waveforms on typically two, but sometimes three or more transmitting antennas inputting to the channel carrying radio waves from Point A to Point B. Multiple antennas and radios (typically, two or three) also are applied to the output of the radio channel at the receiver, along with a lot of signal processing, which ideally improves range and throughput compared with simpler or traditional radio designs operating under similar conditions.

What is MIMO?
MIMO is at the heart of the 802.11n draft specification for 100Mbps wireless. MIMO is sometimes referred to as spatial multiplexing, because it uses a third, spatial dimension - beyond frequency and time - as a carrier for information.

History of MIMO
Background Technologies

The earliest ideas in this field go back to work by A.R. Kaye and D.A. George (1970) and W. van Etten (1975, 1976). Jack Winters and Jack Salz at Bell Laboratories published several papers on beamforming related applications in 1984 and 1986.

History of MIMO
Principal Technologies

Arogyaswami Paulraj and Thomas Kailath proposed the concept of Spatial Multiplexing using MIMO in 1993. Their US Patent No. 5,345,599 issued 1994 on Spatial Multiplexing emphasized applications to wireless broadcast.

History of MIMO
Principal Technologies

In 1996, Greg Raleigh and Gerard J. Foschini refine new approaches to MIMO technology, which considers a configuration where multiple transmit antennas are co-located at one transmitter to improve the link throughput effectively.

History of MIMO
Principal Technologies

Bell Labs was the first to demonstrate a laboratory prototype of spatial multiplexing (SM) in 1998, where spatial multiplexing is a principal technology to improve the performance of MIMO communication systems.

History of MIMO
Wireless Standards

Iospan Wireless Inc. developed the first commercial system in 2001 that used MIMO-OFDMA technology. Iospan technology supported both diversity coding and spatial multiplexing. In 2005, Airgo Networks had developed a pre-11n version based on their patents on MIMO.

History of MIMO
Wireless Standards Several companies (Beceem Communications, Samsung, Runcom Technologies, etc.) have developed MIMO-OFDMA based solutions for IEEE 802.16e WIMAX broadband mobile standard. All upcoming 4G systems will also employ MIMO technology. Several research groups have demonstrated over 1 Gbit/s prototypes.

Functions of MIMO
MIMO can be sub-divided into three main categories, precoding, spatial multiplexing, or SM, and diversity coding.

Functions of MIMO
Precoding - is multi-layer beamforming in a narrow sense or all spatial processing at the transmitter in a wide-sense. - In (single-layer) beamforming, the same signal is emitted from each of the transmit antennas with appropriate phase (and sometimes gain) weighting such that the signal power is maximized at the receiver input.

Functions of MIMO
Precoding - when the receiver has multiple antennas, the transmit beamforming cannot simultaneously maximize the signal level at all of the receive antenna and precoding is used. Note that precoding requires knowledge of the channel state information (CSI) at the transmitter.

Functions of MIMO
Spatial multiplexing - requires MIMO antenna configuration. - In spatial multiplexing, a high rate signal is split into multiple lower rate streams and each stream is transmitted from a different transmit antenna in the same frequency channel.

Functions of MIMO
Spatial multiplexing - If these signals arrive at the receiver antenna array with sufficiently different spatial signatures, the receiver can separate these streams, creating parallel channels for free. Spatial multiplexing is a very powerful technique for increasing channel capacity at higher Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR).

Functions of MIMO
Spatial multiplexing - The maximum number of spatial streams is limited by the lesser in the number of antennas at the transmitter or receiver. Spatial multiplexing can be used with or without transmit channel knowledge.

Functions of MIMO
Diversity coding - used when there is no channel knowledge at the transmitter. In diversity methods a single stream (unlike multiple streams in spatial multiplexing) is transmitted, but the signal is coded using techniques called space-time coding.

Functions of MIMO
Diversity coding - Diversity exploits the independent fading in the multiple antenna links to enhance signal diversity. Because there is no channel knowledge, there is no beamforming or array gain from diversity coding.

Forms of MIMO

MIMO Communications

Multi-antenna types

- Up to now, multi-antenna MIMO (or Single user MIMO) technology has been mainly developed and is implemented in some standards, e.g. 802.11n (draft) products.

Multi-antenna types SISO/SIMO/MISO are degenerate cases of MIMO Multiple-input and single-output (MISO) is a degenerate case when the receiver has a single antenna. Single-input and multiple-output (SIMO) is a degenerate case when the transmitter has a single antenna. Single-input single-output (SISO) is a radio system where neither the transmitter nor receiver have multiple antenna.

Multi-user types

-Recently, the research on multi-user MIMO technology is emerging. While full multi-user MIMO (or network MIMO) can have higher potentials, from its practicality the research on (partial) multi-user MIMO (or multi-user and multi-antenna MIMO) technology is more active.

Multi-user types Multi-user MIMO (MU-MIMO) - Employ advanced decoding techniques. Cooperative MIMO (CO-MIMO) - Utilizes distributed antennas which belong to other users. MIMO Routing - Routing a cluster by a cluster in each hop, where the number of nodes in each cluster is larger or equal to one. MIMO routing is different from conventional (SISO) routing since conventional routing protocols route a node by a node in each hop.

Applications of MIMO
MIMO is planned to be used in Mobile radio telephone standards such as recent 3GPP and 3GPP2 standards. In 3GPP, High-Speed Packet Access plus (HSPA+) and Long Term Evolution (LTE) standards take MIMO into account.

Mathematical Description

MIMO channel model

Mathematical Description
A transmitter sends multiple streams by multiple transmit antennas. The transmit streams go through a matrix channel which consists of multiple paths between multiple transmit antennas at the transmitter and multiple receive antennas at the receiver. Then, the receiver gets the received signal vectors by the multiple receive antennas and decodes the received signal vectors into the original information.

Mathematical Description
MIMO system model

y = Hx + n
where y and x are the receive and transmit vectors, respectively. In addition, H and n are the channel matrix and the noise vector, respectively.

Mathematical Description
The average capacity of a MIMO system is as follows:

which is min(N_t, N_r) times larger than that of a SISO system.

Given the nature of MIMO, it is not limited to wireless communication. It can be used to wire line communication as well. For example, a new type of DSL technology (Gigabit DSL) has been proposed based on Binder MIMO Channels.

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