Interference Modeling for Cellular Networks Under Beamforming Transmission
Abstract:
We propose analytical models for the interference power distribution in a cellular system employing MIMO beamforming in rich and limited scattering environments, which capture non line-of-sight signal propagation in the microwave and mm-wave bands, respectively. Two candidate models are considered: the inverse Gaussian and the inverse Weibull, both are two-parameter heavy tail distributions. We further propose a mixture of these two distributions as a model with three parameters. To estimate the parameters of these distributions, three approaches are used: moment matching, individual distribution maximum likelihood estimation (MLE), and mixture distribution MLE with a designed expectation maximization algorithm. We then introduce simple fitted functions for the mixture model parameters as polynomials of the channel path loss exponent and shadowing variance. To measure the goodness of these models, the information-theoretic metric relative entropy is used to capture the distance from the model distribution to a reference one. The interference models are tested against data obtained by simulating a cellular network based on stochastic geometry. The results show that the three-parameter mixture model offers remarkably good fit to simulated interference power. The mixture model is further used to analyze the capacity of a cellular network employing joint transmit and receive beamforming and confirms a good fit with simulation.