Design, Testing, and Analysis of Advanced Massive MIMO Transmitters
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Advisor
Boumaiza, Slim
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University of Waterloo
Abstract
The evolution of Fifth Generation (5G) wireless systems is driven by the need for higher
data rates, lower latency, and improved coverage. Massive Multiple Input, Multiple Output
(MIMO) transmitter front-ends have emerged as a key enabling technology, employing
multiple parallel transmitter chains—each comprising Digital Signal Processing (DSP),
Power Amplifiers (PAs), and antenna elements—to exploit spatial multiplexing and enable
multi-user beamforming, at the cost of increased system complexity.
The PA is a critical component in each transmitter chain, as its efficiency dominates
energy consumption and its output power determines coverage. However, PA performance
is highly sensitive to load impedance. While isolators in 4G systems maintain a constant
50 Ω load, their use in massive MIMO arrays is impractical due to cost, size, bandwidth, and
integration constraints. Consequently, antenna mismatches and mutual coupling introduce
dynamic load variations that degrade PA and overall system performance, motivating a
holistic system-level design approach.
The first objective of this thesis is to develop tools for system-level analysis of massive
MIMO transmitters under realistic excitation. A multidisciplinary co-simulation frame-
work integrating DSP, Radio Frequency (RF), and electromagnetic domains is proposed
to capture signal processing, PA nonlinearities, and antenna coupling within a unified
environment. Experimental validation using a four-channel fully digital MIMO transmit-
ter demonstrates accurate prediction of system-level trends. A sixteen-channel testbed is
further developed to validate design strategies and capture hardware-specific effects.
The second objective is to enable PA design under realistic system conditions. To
mitigate the computational complexity of large-scale simulations, an emulation platform
is developed that reproduces massive MIMO loading conditions using a single PA. This
approach enables efficient characterization and optimization under dynamic impedance
environments. Combined with the co-simulation framework, it supports PA design directly
at the system level rather than under idealized 50 Ω assumptions.
The third objective is to investigate the impact of precoding on PA behavior. Con-
ventional Digital Pre-Distortion (DPD) linearizes PAs using uncorrelated signals prior to
precoding, implicitly assuming invariant load conditions. However, precoding alters signal
correlation and power distribution, thereby modifying the load impedance seen by each
PA in the presence of mutual coupling, which degrades linearization performance. To ad-
dress this, an alternative architecture is explored in which precoding precedes linearization,
enabling improved robustness and reduced DPD complexity under dynamic conditions.