Abstract:Antenna array calibration is necessary to maintain the high fidelity of beam patterns across a wide range of advanced antenna systems and to ensure channel reciprocity in time division duplexing schemes. Despite the continuous development in this area, most existing solutions are optimised for specific radio architectures, require standardised over-the-air data transmission, or serve as extensions of conventional methods. The diversity of communication protocols and hardware creates a problematic case, since this diversity requires to design or update the calibration procedures for each new advanced antenna system. In this study, we formulate antenna calibration in an alternative way, namely as a task of functional approximation, and address it via Bayesian machine learning. Our contributions are three-fold. Firstly, we define a parameter space, based on near-field measurements, that captures the underlying hardware impairments corresponding to each radiating element, their positional offsets, as well as the mutual coupling effects between antenna elements. Secondly, Gaussian process regression is used to form models from a sparse set of the aforementioned near-field data. Once deployed, the learned non-parametric models effectively serve to continuously transform the beamforming weights of the system, resulting in corrected beam patterns. Lastly, we demonstrate the viability of the described methodology for both digital and analog beamforming antenna arrays of different scales and discuss its further extension to support real-time operation with dynamic hardware impairments.
Abstract:Cell-free multi-user multiple input multiple output networks are a promising alternative to classical cellular architectures, since they have the potential to provide uniform service quality and high resource utilisation over the entire coverage area of the network. To realise this potential, previous works have developed radio resource management mechanisms using various optimisation engines. In this work, we consider the problem of overall ergodic spectral efficiency maximisation in the context of uplink-downlink data power control in cell-free networks. To solve this problem in large networks, and to address convergence-time limitations, we apply scalable multi-objective Bayesian optimisation. Furthermore, we discuss how an intersection of multi-fidelity emulation and Bayesian optimisation can improve radio resource management in cell-free networks.